Reader(s): Steen, Duncan
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Non-Fiction
Period: Romantic
Catalogue No: NA0131
Barcode: 9781843797272
Release Date: 11/2013

NIETZSCHE, F.: Birth of Tragedy (The) (Unabridged)

Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music was published in 1872. In 1869, at the age of 24, he had been appointed a professor of classical philology at the University of Basel, a remarkable position for one of his age, and the book was his first significant publication. It did little, however, to help his reputation as a scholar; his views were controversial and aroused strong criticism in some quarters, while his deliberate espousal of the cause of the composer Richard Wagner was, to say the least, unhelpful. Nietzsche later revised his views on Wagner and re-issued The Birth of Tragedy in 1886 under the title The Birth of Tragedy, or Hellenism and Pessimism, introducing it with An Attempt at a Self-Criticism. The present reading includes this last, his 1871 Preface to Richard Wagner and the original book itself, with its famous discussion of the Apollonian and Dionysian in Greek tragedy.

Tracklist

Disc 1
Nietzsche, Friedrich - Author
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
1The Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music03:00
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
2One04:17
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
3Now, just as the philosopher behaves…04:21
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
4In the same place Schopenhauer also described for us…04:39
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
5Two05:45
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
6In these Greek festivals…03:45
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
7Three04:48
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
8In order to be able to live…05:17
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
9Four04:57
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
10This deification of individuation…05:56
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
11Five06:31
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
12The plastic artist, as well as his relation, the epic poet…03:27
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
13Schopenhauer, who did not hide from the difficulty…05:39
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
14Six06:15
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
15If we are thus entitled to consider the lyrical poem…03:46
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
Disc 2
1Seven05:20
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
2But that emphatic tradition speaks here…04:26
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
3On this last point…05:09
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
4Eight06:00
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
5The satyr chorus is, first and foremost…06:35
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
6This conception of ours…06:06
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
7Nine05:22
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
8There was a very ancient folk belief…05:32
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
9The Prometheus saga is a primordial possession…06:22
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
10Ten04:30
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
11It has been pointed out earlier…05:18
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
12Eleven05:58
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
13The new comedy could now direct its attention…04:57
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
14By contrast, it is, in fact, well known everywhere…05:05
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
Disc 3
1Twelve06:11
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
2Now, how is Euripides' work related to this ideal of Apollonian drama?04:57
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
3As long as the listener still has to figure out…05:32
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
4Thirteen04:15
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
5That is the immensely disturbing thing…05:09
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
6Fourteen06:00
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
7For who can fail to recognize the optimistic element…05:59
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
8Fifteen05:13
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
9With that statement the fundamental secret of science is unmasked…03:54
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
10With respect to this practical pessimism…04:48
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
11Sixteen05:07
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
12Perhaps we can touch on that original problem…06:34
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
13Now, when in a particular case…05:02
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
Disc 4
1Seventeen05:23
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
2At this point we are concerned with the question…05:22
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
3From another perspective…05:35
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
4Eighteen05:40
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
5While the disaster slumbering in the bosom of theoretical culture…05:43
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
6Nineteen05:42
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
7For us now it is unimportant…04:43
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
8Now we can immediately draw attention here…05:42
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
9However, if in the explanation given above…05:38
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
10Twenty03:45
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
11There is no other artistic period…04:16
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
12Twenty One05:16
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
13Trusting in this noble deception…04:58
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
14And where we breathlessly imagined we were dying…04:47
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
15But nonetheless we could just as surely claim…04:00
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
Disc 5
1Twenty Two06:07
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
2That pathological purgation…06:05
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
3Twenty Three05:45
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
4I know that now I have to take the sympathetic friend…06:26
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
5Twenty Four06:21
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
6Here it is necessary for us to vault with a bold leap…05:30
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
7Twenty Five04:06
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
8Postscript02:15
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
9One02:55
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
10Two02:51
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
11Three02:59
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
12Four04:22
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
13Five06:15
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
14Six03:37
Steen, Duncan (Reader)
15Seven05:20
Steen, Duncan (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 06:05:08