Speranza
In his
essay on Parsifal, the anthropologist Claude Lévi- Strauss consideres the
relationship between Wagner's text and some of his medieval sources.
He
considered the question which is a central element of these texts to be
necessary because of a break in communication between two worlds: respectively,
the supernatural, represented by the Grail castle and the terrestrial,
represented by King Arthur's court.
A spell has disrupted
communication between these two worlds, which are distinct - although for the
Celtic mind, it is possible to pass from one to the other. Since that break in
communication, King Arthur's court ... has been on the move constantly, waiting
for news. In fact, King Arthur never holds court until someone has announced an
event to him.
Thus, this terrestrial court is in quest of answers to questions
that are perpetually posed by its anxious agitation. In symmetrical fashion, the
court of the Grail, whose immobility is symbolized by the paralysis of the
king's lower limbs, offers, likewise perpetually, an answer to questions that no
one asks it.
In this sense, we can say that there exists a model, which
may be universal, of Percevalian myths.
It is the reverse of another, equally
universal model - that of the Oedipal myths, whose problematical structure is
symmetrical though inverted.
For the Oedipal myths pose the problem of a
communication that is at first exceptionally effective (the solving of the
riddle), but then leads to excess in the form of incest - the sexual union of
people who ought to be distant from one another - and of plague, which ravages
Thebes by accelerating and disrupting the great natural cycles.
On the other
hand, the Percevalian myths deal with communication interrupted in three ways:
(a) the answer offered to an unanswered question (which is the opposite of a
riddle).
(b) the chastity required of one or more heroes (contrary to incestuous
behaviour); and
(c) the wasteland - that is, the halting of the natural cycles that
ensure the fertility of plants, animals and human beings.
As we know,
Wagner rejected the motif of the unasked question and replaced it with a motif
that somewhat reverses it while performing the same function.
Communication is
assured or re-established not by an intellectual operation but by an emotional
identification.
Parsifal does not understand the riddle of the Grail and remains
unable to solve it until he relives the catastrophe at its source.
In Wagner, indeed, there is no King Arthur's court.
And hence
the issue is not the resurrection of communication between the earthly world -
represented by this court - and the beyond.
The Wagnerian drama unfolds entirely
between the kingdoms of the Grail and of Klingsor: two worlds, of which one was,
and will again be, endowed with all virtues; while the other is vile and must be
destroyed.
There is, hence, no question of restoring or even establishing any
mediation between them.
By the annihilation of the one and the restoration of
the other, the latter alone must endure and establish itself as a world of
mediation...
It was obvious to Lévi-Strauss that the domain of the
Grail and the domain of Klingsor were opposites (and opposites are, according to
Lévi-Strauss, important structural elements of myths).
In the former, there is
accelerated communication, excess, tropical vegetation, mocking laughter, an
Oedipal relationship (Kundry is both Jocasta and Sphinx) and a woman who poses a
riddle for Parsifal.
In the latter, there is silence, sterility, decay and an
answer is offered to an unasked question.
Thus, the problem, in
mythological terms, would be to establish an equilibrium between the two
opposite worlds.
To do so, one should probably, like Parsifal, go into and come
out of the one world and be excluded from and re-enter the other world.
Above
all, however (and this is Wagner's contribution to universal mythology), one
must know and not know.
In other words, one must know what one does not know,
"Durch Mitleid wissend" ("knowing through compassion") - not through an act of
communication but through a surge of pity, which provides mythical thinking with
a way out of the dilemma in which its long unrecognised intellectualism has
risked imprisoning it.
Although Lévi-Strauss does not
mention it, the story of young Telefo presumably belongs to the class of
Oedipal myths.
In one version of the myth (that which is portrayed on the
Pergamon Altar), Telefo consults the Delphic Oracle, which sends him to the
region of Mysia in search of his own origins. After heroic deeds, Telephus
almost marries his mother.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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