Emslie's study of Wagner's creativity examines the centrality of love - and its obverse, hate - to the composer's world view.
Barry Emslie Livres



Emslie argues for the superiority of narrative explanations in the humanities, claiming they offer a more truthful representation of reality and enable insights into normative values. The inclusion of aesthetics enhances this argument, suggesting that narratives not only reflect reality more accurately but also enrich our understanding of values and interpretations.
Speculations on German history
- 256pages
- 9 heures de lecture
"German history never loses its fascination. It is exceptionally varied, contradictory, and raises difficult problems for the historian. In a material sense, there have been a great many Germanies, so that it was long unclear what 'Germany' would amount to geopolitically, while German intellectuals fought constantly over the idea(s) of Germany. Provocative and spiced with humor, Speculations tackles Germany's successes and catastrophes in view of this fraught relationship between material reality and ideology. Concentrating on the period from Friedrich the Great until today, the book is less a conventional history than an extended essay. It moves freely within the chosen period, and because of its cultural studies disposition, devotes a great deal of attention to German writers, artists, and intellectuals. It looks at the ways in which German historians have attempted to come to terms with their own varying notions of nation, culture, and race. An underlying philosophical assumption is that history is not one dominant narrative but a struggle between competing, simultaneous narratives: like all those Germanies of the past and of the mind, history is plural. Barry Emslie pursues this agenda into the present, arguing that there has been an unprecedented qualitative change in the Federal Republic in the quarter-century since unification."-- Provided by publisher