Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition

Wilhelm Müller’s 1824 cycle Die Winterreise, and particularly its final poem ‘Der Leiermann’, are often read as nihilistic expressions of a Romantic death wish. The wanderer moves into a state of eternal alienation, symbolized by the icy landscape where he will forever rehearse his songs of loneline...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Neilly, J
Format: Journal article
Published: Routledge 2019
_version_ 1826283985475469312
author Neilly, J
author_facet Neilly, J
author_sort Neilly, J
collection OXFORD
description Wilhelm Müller’s 1824 cycle Die Winterreise, and particularly its final poem ‘Der Leiermann’, are often read as nihilistic expressions of a Romantic death wish. The wanderer moves into a state of eternal alienation, symbolized by the icy landscape where he will forever rehearse his songs of loneliness and despair to the much-maligned music of the outcast hurdy-gurdy man, who has in turn been read as a harbinger of death. This article argues that such readings overlook the radically critical mode taken up by the wanderer when he stops his journey, dismissing a Romantic aesthetics of forwards striving in favour of a (paradoxically) new aesthetics of repetition. The subversive potential of this act is revealed in Elfriede Jelinek’s 2011 play Winterreise, in which a hurdy-gurdy woman challenges a modern culture obsessed with novelty by stubbornly refusing to move. By rereading Müller’s ‘Der Leiermann’ in dialogue with Jelinek’s experimental reworking, we can recognize how both works reject the chimerical lure of the future for the sake of deliberate attention to the present moment. Müller’s poem is not, then, the nadir of a self-destructive Romanticism, but an innovative escape from its logical end.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T01:07:03Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:8bb640b6-52da-41ca-8bfc-a441457b7960
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T01:07:03Z
publishDate 2019
publisher Routledge
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:8bb640b6-52da-41ca-8bfc-a441457b79602022-03-26T22:39:50ZWilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetitionJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8bb640b6-52da-41ca-8bfc-a441457b7960Symplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2019Neilly, JWilhelm Müller’s 1824 cycle Die Winterreise, and particularly its final poem ‘Der Leiermann’, are often read as nihilistic expressions of a Romantic death wish. The wanderer moves into a state of eternal alienation, symbolized by the icy landscape where he will forever rehearse his songs of loneliness and despair to the much-maligned music of the outcast hurdy-gurdy man, who has in turn been read as a harbinger of death. This article argues that such readings overlook the radically critical mode taken up by the wanderer when he stops his journey, dismissing a Romantic aesthetics of forwards striving in favour of a (paradoxically) new aesthetics of repetition. The subversive potential of this act is revealed in Elfriede Jelinek’s 2011 play Winterreise, in which a hurdy-gurdy woman challenges a modern culture obsessed with novelty by stubbornly refusing to move. By rereading Müller’s ‘Der Leiermann’ in dialogue with Jelinek’s experimental reworking, we can recognize how both works reject the chimerical lure of the future for the sake of deliberate attention to the present moment. Müller’s poem is not, then, the nadir of a self-destructive Romanticism, but an innovative escape from its logical end.
spellingShingle Neilly, J
Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title_full Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title_fullStr Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title_full_unstemmed Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title_short Wilhelm Müller’s Leiermann, Elfriede Jelinek’s Leierfrau, and radical repetition
title_sort wilhelm muller s leiermann elfriede jelinek s leierfrau and radical repetition
work_keys_str_mv AT neillyj wilhelmmullersleiermannelfriedejelineksleierfrauandradicalrepetition