Title: Apollo
1 Apollo Dionysus An
Assignment for Contexts for the ArtsAddressing
F. Nietzsches The Birth of Tragedy from the
Spirit of Music (1872)
By Jeff Walter October, 2003
2Paragraph 1The definition of art as an evolving
duality
Instructions
- One extreme is a dream, while the other is
intoxication. Our Apollonian urge toward
understanding, stirring our aspirations toward
individuation, serves to support an illusion made
by the burning plasticity of optimistic reason
and logic. Art is my intentional sentence of
balanced classical/romantic meaning. The
intoxication of Dionysian living, digesting the
joys and terrors of unlimited reveling and
unashamedly consuming the passions of being, is
the music of tragedy. Art needs its own tragedy,
which kills artists for art. Art is an affective
effect of the natural intermingling of these
individuated and communal extremes, playing out
as a harmony, sometimes overly dissonant or
consonant.
3Paragraphs 2 3The Context Virtuality from The
Birth of Tragedy
Instructions
- Nietzsche reveals the importance of virtuality by
suggesting that everyday reality is an illusion
which hides a "totally different kind of reality"
(Section 1, Paragraph 3). "Although of the two
halves of lifethe waking and the dreamingthe
former is generally considered not only the more
important but the only one which is truly lived,
I would, at the risk of sounding paradoxical,
propose the opposite view" (Section 4, Paragraph
1). With this, Nietzsche shows influence from
Heraclitus, proposing that humans lack the
ability to apprehend the true reality without the
apparitions and illusions of dreams. But it is
equally important for humans to see virtuality as
power, embracing the most natural urge to dance
in ritual. In this way the artist's virtual
reality of individualism can be severed in favor
of the primal community on Oneness. The
interesting thing is the absolute need for
virtuality. As I read Nietzsche, the power of
true being would be unbearable for humans without
the cover of virtual illusions. - The spirit of music, the power of nature's
Dionysian essence, is best represented to human
communities in folk (not art) song. "Since
melody precedes all else, it may have to undergo
any number of objectifications, such as a variety
of texts it presents" (Section 6, Paragraph 2).
Folk song is the intermingling of Apollo and
Dionysus, with its melody preceding its text or
poetry in importance. Songs, as we normally know
and talk and think of them, are virtual. As
labels, songs direct us to texts, hiding from our
illusory view the vitality of tune and melody.
Language is a tool of appearance, and is
powerless to bring us into art and music. We
must assume our satyr position, not to become
fifing shepherds, but to be as noble, savage
beasts revealed as the balance to contemplative
individuation.
4Paragraphs 4 5The Context of Apocalypse from
The Birth of Tragedy
Instructions
- Finding tragedy requires Dionysian intoxication
toward apocalypse, and the terror of loosing
one's self is perhaps most acute for artists.
"Not only does the bond between man and man come
to be forged once more by the magic of the
Dionysian rite, but nature itself, long alienated
or subjugated, rises again to celebrate the
reconciliation with her prodigal son, man"
(Section 1, Paragraph 5). The revelation of
tragedy is the realization of organic humanity.
"Man now after the sounding of universal harmony
and the disappearance of individuation expresses
himself through song and dance as the member of a
higher community he has forgotten how to walk,
how to speak, and is on the brink of taking wing
as he dances" (Section 1, Paragraph 5). Thus,
the apocalypse here is a death of self, leading
to community, and the discovery of humanity in a
Oneness. The ideal artist is master of both
dreams and ecstasies, but seems inevitably drawn
to some measure of forgetfulness in one direction
or the other. The irony of the artist involves
the death and destruction of individuation as a
process of discovering universal singularity.
Strangely, it is an anti-subjective motion,
toward an objectivity which can only be
understood, again, through the illusions of
dreams. - But there is another apocalypse to all of this,
for Nietzsche is responding to the death of
tragedy, and only then its eventual rebirth. A
look beyond the assigned first sections of the
book reveals his agenda. He struggles to outline
the death of tragedy in more detail than its
original birth. As a result, he becomes poised
to herald its new birth in the nineteenth century
fervor of Wagnerian musings. However, further
beyond, the rewriter of Zarathustra mocks himself
and his own tragic revelations. He laughs at
himself, and at the memory of romantic visions of
romantic music, realizing his own apocalyptic
maturation.
5Paragraph 6A Primary Source Connection
Instructions
Sophocles, Oedipus the King, The Harvard
Classics. 190914, http//www.bartleby.com/8/5/
I selected three from the pride of Sophocles,
Nietzsches exemplar for the beginning of the end
of original tragedy. What strikes me most about
these passages are the singular pronouns. Some
explain them away as adaptations of the
developing individual actor. However, now they
read as signals of the unifying elements of
tragic involvement. When we become our role in
the tragedy, we are the chorus. But we speak as
one, our thoughts reflecting the balanced
intermingling of our Apollonian and Dionysian
natures.
6Paragraphs 7 8A Contemporary Tragedy
Instructions
- The passion of John F. Kennedy is a tragic art
work of our contemporary world. Kennedy is
Oedipus, killing and defiling his father and
mother. We are his engendered parents, the
paternal and maternal mass public. We view
greatness, believing the virtual reality of his
living and his dying. His own tragic death does
not qualify as the core and essence of the
tragedy. He makes the tragedy, killing the
Father State through Dionysian feasts with
mobster-monsters, and defiling Mother Integrity
by ejaculating into the whores of visible fame. - We are the Chorus of this tragedy, believing in
and craving the television's ritual of mirror
living. We sing blindly, ignoring his turn from
luminous truth to vilest nature, as he digests
sins at the Bacchian feats of Sinatra in Vegas.
Then we vomit in confusion and terror when faced
with the brain-spattered wife at his tragic turn.
This is an Apocalypse of democracy, an end which
reveals the truth of our imitative dreams.
Nietzsche holds that Zarathustra spoke most
importantly through his "down going." And it is
that Zarathustra, the one that moves us into
life, who laughs at our illusory knowledge.
7The Assignment
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- DUE DATE - Monday, October 27, 2003 at 1100am
(via email posting date and time). No late
submissions accepted. - EVALUATION - Submissions of this assignment will
be graded objectively and subjectively according
to the quality of the submissions in terms of
content, style, structure, presentation, and rule
compliance. The rules are outlined below in the
"Instructions" section of this page. The
assignment is worth 20 of your final grade in
the course. The grade of "C" or below on this
assignment may result in a student's inability to
earn a grade of "B" or above in the course. - MATERIALS NEEDED
- This URL http//www.geocities.com/thenietzschech
annel/bt3.htm. - Access to a word processor/computer and the
ability to email submissions to
jwalter_at_txwes.edu. - Thoughtful consideration, the willingness to
learn, the ability to follow instructions, an
appreciation for clarity, the ability to think,
respect, the willingness to work, discovery, the
ability to reform instructions, creativity,
obedience, the ability to write well, patience,
perseverance, the tenacity to solve problems
independently, and other characteristics and
traits expected of learners in higher education
settings focused on the study of the arts. - OBJECTIVES
- To invite students to learn.
- To entreat students to learn about some thing.
- To enable students to master the content of an
assignment pertaining to the course. - To assist students in realizing their inability
to master the content of an assignment pertaining
to the course, thereby providing students with an
initial understanding of the subversion of
didactic learning methodologies and pedagogies. - To provide students a summation of the Context of
Virtuality and the Context of Apocalypse within
one primary source. - INSTRUCTIONS
- Find the web page at the URL listed above (see
Materials Needed). - Read this web page, which is a translation of the
first eight sections of Friedrich Nietzsche's
1872 publication The Birth of Tragedy out of the
Spirit of Music.
8The Assignment
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- In one paragraph describe the continually
evolving duality to which art owes its existence.
Your answer may be composed out of information
gathered from various sections of the assigned
text. The paragraph must contain six sentences.
Each sentence should be at least ten words in
length, but must not exceed twenty five words in
length. This question is intended to force a
learner to reduce a central idea of the treatise
in a manner which protects, communicates and
expresses the integral importance of that central
idea. - Write two paragraphs explaining how the assigned
text best elucidates the Context of Virtuality.
Both paragraphs must be six sentences in length,
and all sentences should conform to the 10-25
word limit guidelines provided in number 1 above.
This answer must also contain two direct quotes
("citations") from the text, both of which will
not be counted in the paragraph/sentence length
requirements. In other words, the quotes from
the assigned text are exclusive from the sentence
requirements, regardless of the sentence and word
length of those quotes. Citations from the text
should be formatted parenthetically, at the end
of the quoted material, and should list section
and paragraph numbers ("Section 3, paragraph 4"
for example). This question is intended to
compel students to read carefully, completely and
creatively, and to make the learning connections
required to give the course meaning and purpose. - Write two paragraphs explaining how the assigned
text best elucidates the Context of Apocalypse.
Follow all guidelines for these paragraphs as
explained in number 2 above (with the exception
of the topic of the paragraphs). This question
is intended to force students to meet the goals
listed in number 2 above. - First, complete a source-extending activity. Go
to the Wesleyan Library or another suitable
location and find a Greek tragedy in English
translation. Search the text of the tragedy to
find three "lines" of the Chorus which you can
quote as examples of the arguments/opinions
expressed in the assigned text. Write one
paragraph (six sentences, 10-25 words each) which
explains the connection that you forge between
these primary source examples and the specific
arguments in the assigned text. Make sure to
refer to section and paragraph numbers of the
assigned text as explained in number 2 above.
Format the citation of quotations of primary
material (lines from the Chorus of your chosen
Greek tragedy) by listing Author, Title, Version,
and Relative Location for example - "(Sophocles, Trachiniae, Translated by R. C.
Jebb, online at http//ancienthistory.about.com/g
i/dynamic/offsite.htm?sitehttp//classics.mit.edu
/Sophocles/trachinae.html)." This question is
intended to engage students in the
responsibilities and work involved in learning
about the arts, and to suggest the necessity of
careful examination in relation to the expression
and communication of personal convictions and
opinions. - Complete one more source-extending activity.
Choose a contemporary ("from the current day, or
time, or society") tragedy or tragedy-like art
work which has, in your opinion, elements of a
Greek Chorus as elucidated by the assigned text
and your discovered example (number 4 above).
Your interpretation of what those elements are
and/or should be is the focus of this question.
Compose two paragraphs (following the guidelines
above six sentences, 10-25 words each, per
paragraph) explaining your choice, drawing
connections to the assigned text and to your
chosen Greek tragedy Chorus lines. Finally
(within the two paragraphs), explain how your
chosen contemporary source directly applies to
the Contexts of Virtuality and Apocalypse. This
question is intended to challenge students to
attain the privilege of protest and discontent as
exemplified through the work of the author of the
assigned text. - ASSIGNMENT OUTLINE (60-150 words per paragraph,
480-1200 total words, 2-5 pages, app. 250 words
per page) - A total of 8 paragraphs each comprised of six,
10-25 word sentences. - Paragraph 1 A summary of the "evolving duality"
in the assigned text. - Paragraphs 2 3 The Context of Virtuality from
and in the assigned text. - Paragraphs 4 5 The Context of Apocalypse from
and in the assigned text. - Paragraph 6 An exemplar Greek tragedy related to
the assigned text. - Paragraphs 7 8 A fully contextual
interpretation of a contemporary source.