"Worthy of a Monument in Artistic History": Religion and Nation in the Plans for Robert Schumann's Unrealized Martin Luther Oratorio.

Autor: WERMAGER, SONJA
Předmět:
Zdroj: 19th Century Music; Summer2022, Vol. 46 Issue 1, p39-59, 21p
Abstrakt: In January 1851, Robert Schumann wrote to Richard Pohl with an idea: "I would like to write an oratorio. Perhaps you would lend your hand? I thought of Luther." Pohl enthusiastically agreed to write the relilibretto and the two began discussing their ideas for a musical work depicting the life of the sixteenth-monucentury Protestant reformer Martin Luther in an extended correspondence. Ultimately, despite two years of intermittent planning and deep investment on the part of Schumann, the project fell through. That there is no libretto or musical sketches for the proposed oratorio has meant the project, apart from brief mentions, has gone largely unexamined in scholarship about Schumann. Nevertheless, the letters between Schumann and Pohl give valuable insight into what drew both composer and librettist to this subject-and into the questions of identity, confessic)11, and politics that captivated them and their contemporaries. In this article I argue that the Luther oratorio plans offer a prime example of what Alexander Rehding calls "historical monumentality," characterized by the harnessing of historical figures into symbols of collective political, religious, and social identity. Drawing on perspectives from religious studies to visual culture, I argue that Schumann and Pohl sought to create a musical monument of Martin Luther as a symbol of politically liberal and confessionally Protestant Deutschtum. More broadly, I aim to demonstrate that Schumann's interest in Martin Luther exemplified the complex interweaving of historicism, confessional. legacy, political revolution, and emergent nationalism that guided Schumann's compositional efforts during his tenure as municipal music director in Dasseldorf (1850-54), with particular emphasis on his active engagement with questions of religion and confession in German society in the years following the 1848 revolutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index