Music and Letters Advance Access originally published online on December 16, 2005
Music and Letters 2006 87(1):52-71; doi:10.1093/ml/gci177
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Musicology and Critical Theory: The Case of Wagner, Adorno, and Horkheimer
Adornos Versuch über Wagner (1938/1952) is unquestionably a significant musicological work, yet the discipline has sought mostly to neutralize, even while registering, its impact. The essential and acknowledged influence of Max Horkheimers study of bourgeois anthropological ideology upon Adornos monograph is outlined in order to construct a context for its understanding and use within musicology. More broadly, the question is raised whether this collision of ideas originating with the Frankfurt School offers a workable model for reading, into music, a coded reflection of sociological meaning. To conclude, a suggestion is put forward as to how the Versuch might be used as a basis for ongoing research: will history judge Wagners achievement to be the source of so-called new music, or merely an extravagant symptom of the decline of the old?