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Fin-de-siècle fantasies: Elektra, degeneration and sexual science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2008

Extract

In 1903, Otto Weininger, twenty-three, Viennese, Jewish, and an imminent suicide, published his misogynist manifesto Sex and Character and created an international sensation. ‘One began’, reported a contemporary, ‘to hear in the men's clubs of England and in the cafés of France and Germany – one began to hear singular mutterings among men. Even in the United States where men never talk about women, certain whispers might be heard. The idea was that a new gospel had appeared.’ Weininger's new gospel tied the spiritual progress of the human race to the repudiation of its female half. Women, said Weininger, are purely material beings, mindless, sensuous, animalistic and amoral; lacking individuality, they act only at the behest of a ‘universalised, generalised, impersonal’ sexual instinct. For humanity to achieve its spiritual destiny, men – particularly ‘Aryan’ men, who had not suffered a racial degeneracy that made the task impossible – must achieve the individualistic supremacy first revealed by the philosophy of Immanuel Kant. In order to do this, they must both rid themselves of the femininity within them and reject their sexual desires for the women around them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

A portion of this essay, under the same title, was published as pan of the programme book for the Los Angeles Opera's 1991 production of Elektra, included in Performing Arts 25/2 (1991), pp. 23–6.Google Scholar I am grateful to the publishers for permission to reprint this material.

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11 The quoted phrase is from Kristeva, Julia, ‘About Chinese Women’, in The Kristeva Reader, ed. Moi, Toril (New York, 1988), 152.Google Scholar Further citations appear in the text.

12 Dijkstra, , Idols (n. 1)Google Scholar, reproduces a large number of these paintings. A good colour reproduction of Moving Waters appears in Pre-Modern An of Vienna: 1848–1898, ed. Botstein, Leon and Weintraub, Linda (Detroit, 1987).Google Scholar On Fish-Blood and fin-de-siècle sexuality, see my Music as Cultural Practice: 1800–1900 (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1990), 142–3.Google Scholar

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16 The term ‘primitive’ refers nonprejudicially to the absence of a legal system or the investment of custom with the force of law.

17 Girard, René, Violence and the Sacred, trans. Gregory, Patrick (Baltimore, 1977).Google Scholar Further citations appear in the text.

18 Girard, (p. 292)Google Scholar observes that Aristotle's Poetics ‘is something of a manual of sacrificial practices, for the qualities that make a “good” tragic hero are precisely those required of the sacrificial victim’.

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25 A further technical detail is worth noting in this connection. The Elektra chord and its bitonal complement form a ten-note collection, excluding only D and A. These excluded notes, as Abbate has observed, form one of Elektra's distinctive ‘voices’, heard at several crucial moments of the drama (Figs. 90, 178, 10a; an additional instance occurs at Fig. 123a). The conjuncture of E flat minor and C minor can thus be taken, in an even fuller sense than the one already noted, to represent the latent position that Elektra holds off as long as possible – but that, especially given her impulse towards chromatic saturation, cannot be held off forever.

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