Gustav Mahler and the Crisis of Jewish Masculinity

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Abstract

The fin de siecle was a transformative period for gender identity in Austro-Germany. As women gained more social and sexual inde- pendence, many men began to suffer a crisis of masculinity. Gustav Mahler was no excep- tion. Issues of gender identity, sex, and mascu- linity are woven into the composer’s biography. Mahler’s relationship with masculinity is further complicated when contextualized within his Jewish heritage. Otto Weininger’s Sex and Character of 1903 chided Jewish men for their inherent femininity and added a new, gendered dimension to antisemitic criticism. Attempting to escape this presumed Jewish effeminacy, Mahler became celibate and adopted a lifestyle that mirrored the values of the Körperkultur movement which promoted pure, Christian masculinity to counter the rise of the new, sexually liberated Viennese woman. Musically, Mahler looked to works such as Wagner’s Parsifal, which acted as a gendered religious parable for the triumph of chaste masculinity over the inherent corruption and degeneracy of women. Gustav Mahler therefore becomes a privileged space for the examination of gendered Jewishness in the rapidly changing landscape of fin-de-siècle Vienna
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)157-175
Number of pages19
Journal19th-Century Music
Volume47
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 University of California Press. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Mahler
  • Masculinity
  • gender studies
  • jewish studies
  • fin-de-siecle Vienna

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