“Naturally, the single individual can be wrecked by old institutions just as much as he can be destroyed by the representatives of a new world. A class, however, that believes in its ultimate victory, will regard its sacrifices as the price of victory, whereas the other class, that feels the approach of its own inevitable ruin, sees in the tragic destiny of its heroes a sign of the coming end of the world and a twilight of the gods. The destructive blows of blind fate offer no satisfaction to the optimistic middle class which believes in the victory of its cause; only the dying classes of tragic ages find comfort in the thought that in this world all great and noble things are doomed to destruction and wish to place this destruction in a transfiguring light. Perhaps the romantic philosophy of tragedy, with its apotheosis of the self-sacrificing hero, is already a sign of the decadence of the bourgeoisie. The middle class will, at any rate, not produce a tragic drama in which fate is resignedly accepted until it feels threatened with the loss of its very life; then, for the first time, it will see, as happens in Ibsen’s play, fate knocking at the door in the menacing shape of triumphant youth.”
Quote by Arnold Hauser
Work
The Social History of Art Volume 3: Rococo, Classicism and Romanticism
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Democratic Dilemmas and Divine Inspiration: On leadership and the fate of freedom in America
Source: Lectures on Literature
Source: En skuggboxares memoarer
Source: Main Currents Of Marxism: The Founders, The Golden Age, The Breakdown
Source: The Communist Manifesto
Source: The Origins of Totalitarianism