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The Philosopher’s Ring—Wagner as Thinker and Dramatist
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Presents Wagner as a serious philosopher and offers a fresh perspective on the Ring and its unique fusion of myth, human drama, and philosophical insight.Few figures of the nineteenth century were ...
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20 January 2026

Presents Wagner as a serious philosopher and offers a fresh perspective on the Ring and its unique fusion of myth, human drama, and philosophical insight.
Few figures of the nineteenth century were more influential than Richard Wagner, and few works of art have the scope and historical significance of The Ring of the Nibelung. Wagner himself said that it expressed his entire philosophy of life. Yet little attention has been paid to him as a philosopher, aesthetic theories aside. Instead, the Ring has been viewed in the light of Schopenhauer, Feuerbach, or even Hegel. Wagner's own ideas do not deserve this neglect, and this book addresses that omission. It starts with the more widely read philosophers of his day, such as Fichte; in their context Wagner's often fragmentary thoughts reveal a coherent "materialist idealism" that constitutes a late but significant contribution to Classical German philosophy. His acute social and psychological insights are still relevant, and so is the philosophical history that he saw prefigured in Greek tragedy.
Wagner's philosophy also illuminates the structure of the Ring and offers fresh insights into the characters and conflicts of that endlessly interpretable work. Approachable and engagingly written, balancing narrative, philosophical analysis, and a detailed consideration of the Ring's four music dramas, The Philosopher's Ring shows the cycle to be a work of unparalleled philosophical depth, one reason that it continues to challenge audiences even now, a century and a half after its premiere.
Few figures of the nineteenth century were more influential than Richard Wagner, and few works of art have the scope and historical significance of The Ring of the Nibelung. Wagner himself said that it expressed his entire philosophy of life. Yet little attention has been paid to him as a philosopher, aesthetic theories aside. Instead, the Ring has been viewed in the light of Schopenhauer, Feuerbach, or even Hegel. Wagner's own ideas do not deserve this neglect, and this book addresses that omission. It starts with the more widely read philosophers of his day, such as Fichte; in their context Wagner's often fragmentary thoughts reveal a coherent "materialist idealism" that constitutes a late but significant contribution to Classical German philosophy. His acute social and psychological insights are still relevant, and so is the philosophical history that he saw prefigured in Greek tragedy.
Wagner's philosophy also illuminates the structure of the Ring and offers fresh insights into the characters and conflicts of that endlessly interpretable work. Approachable and engagingly written, balancing narrative, philosophical analysis, and a detailed consideration of the Ring's four music dramas, The Philosopher's Ring shows the cycle to be a work of unparalleled philosophical depth, one reason that it continues to challenge audiences even now, a century and a half after its premiere.
Price: $120.00
Pages: 166
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Camden House
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Publication Date:
20 January 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781640142459
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
PHILOSOPHY / Individual Philosophers, Western philosophy from c 1800, MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Opera, LITERARY CRITICISM / European / German, History of music, Composers and songwriters, Musical scores, lyrics and libretti, European history
A short, accessible, but also quite ambitious and rather original book that links the Ring not forward to Schopenhauer but backward to the German idealists and early Romantics. The focus of the book is on the irreparable loss and the fraught retrieval that the pristine unity of self and world suffers under conditions of civilizational progress. Steinberg presents the Ring as both a highly political and a deeply personal work of art and philosophy.
— Günter Zöller, University of Munich
This is a fascinating book. I marveled at how well Steinberg paved his own way through the thicket of Wagner's prose, and how he develops a plausible and persuasive reading of the drama that differs from earlier interpretations-and there are many. I am also impressed by his thoughts relating to our own time: we are responsible, collectively, for the future of our planet/country/community. The gods have resigned, and it is up to us to address what perhaps helps us to survive as a species.
— Jürgen Thym, Professor Emeritus of Musicology, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester
— Günter Zöller, University of Munich
This is a fascinating book. I marveled at how well Steinberg paved his own way through the thicket of Wagner's prose, and how he develops a plausible and persuasive reading of the drama that differs from earlier interpretations-and there are many. I am also impressed by his thoughts relating to our own time: we are responsible, collectively, for the future of our planet/country/community. The gods have resigned, and it is up to us to address what perhaps helps us to survive as a species.
— Jürgen Thym, Professor Emeritus of Musicology, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester
Preface
Acknowledgments
A Note on Citations.
1: Prologue: Das Gesamtgenie
2: A Philosophical Age
3: Wagner as Philosopher
4: The Future that Failed
5: From Siegfrieds Tod to Der Ring des Nibelungen
6: Das Rheingold: Separation and Order
7: Die Walküre: Reasons of State
8. Siegfried: Stasis and Movement
9: Götterdämmerung: The Deed that Redeems the World
10: Epilogue: After Transcendence
Appendix: A Note on Schopenhauer
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments
A Note on Citations.
1: Prologue: Das Gesamtgenie
2: A Philosophical Age
3: Wagner as Philosopher
4: The Future that Failed
5: From Siegfrieds Tod to Der Ring des Nibelungen
6: Das Rheingold: Separation and Order
7: Die Walküre: Reasons of State
8. Siegfried: Stasis and Movement
9: Götterdämmerung: The Deed that Redeems the World
10: Epilogue: After Transcendence
Appendix: A Note on Schopenhauer
Works Cited
Index