“Hinter den Spiegeln warten nur Spiegel”: Myth, Dystopia, and Utopia in Peter Eötvös’s Paradise Reloaded (Lilith)

Main Article Content

Jane Forner

Abstract

This article argues that operatic attention to myth has evolved in new directions in recent years, in counterpoint to a trend for representing recent historical and celebrity narratives on stage. I analyze Péter Eötvös’s opera Paradise Reloaded (Lilith) as an example of composers engaging ‘distant pasts’ as a vehicle to interrogate political presents.


Using Jewish and secular myths of Lilith, Milton’s Paradise Lost, and Imre Madách’s The Tragedy of Man, Eötvös and librettist Albert Ostermaier construct a feminist-philosophical exploration of knowledge and truth, reflecting themes in modern European society from refugee crises to Putin’s Russia. My approach is three-fold: I suggest that their musical and narrative modes both parody and rely on operatic conventions, centered on the transformation of Lilith from demon-seductress to protagonist. I locate the opera’s utopian/dystopian soundworld in a lineage of 20thcentury European approaches to satire, irony, and the grotesque in music, exemplified in Shostakovich and Ligeti, drawing on Esti Sheinberg’s theoretical framework.


I situate this study within the 'living archive' of contemporary opera: the contrasting aesthetics of the opera’s three key stagings — Neue Oper Wien (2013), Theater Chemnitz (2015), and Theater Bielefeld (2020) — and my interviews with Eötvös, Ostermaier, and others involved. Finally, I position Eötvös’s own history as a lens to evaluate intersecting musical and political identities, engaging especially Anna Dalos and Rachel Beckles Willson’s work on post-Cold War Central European composers. Ultimately, I propose that Paradise Reloaded offers a revival of Lilith mythology for the 21stcentury, demanding attention to how opera can navigate a dialectic of dystopian/utopian pasts, presents, and futures.

Article Details

Section

Artikel

Author Biography

Jane Forner

Jane Forner is a musicologist whose work focuses on contemporary opera and performance in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Her research explores two primary areas: feminist music-making in new music and opera, and language, diaspora and intercultural collaboration in European and North American music, with a particular interest in contemporary uses of mythology, ancient, and medieval source material in new opera creation. She received her BA in Music from the University of Cambridge in 2014, a PhD in Historical Musicology from Columbia University in 2020, and is currently a Teaching Fellow in Music at the University of Aberdeen. (Stand 2021)