Anti-Semitism and Nazi Appropriation
During the 20th century, the public perception of Wagner became largely centered on his anti-Semitism, largely due to the appropriation of his music by Nazi Germany.
Wagner promulgated many anti-semitic views over the course of his life, through both conversation and numerous writings. He frequently accused Jews, and in particular Jewish musicians, of being a harmful foreign element in Germany, and called for either their expulsion or the abandonment of Jewish culture. Some scholars have argued that his operas also contain hidden anti-Semitic messages, but this claim is disputed.
Wagner's first and most controversial anti-Semitic essay was "Das Judenthum in der Musik", originally published in 1850 in the Neue Zeitschrift under the pen-name "K. Freigedenk" ("free thought"). The essay purported to explain "popular dislike" of the music of Jewish composers such as Wagner's contemporaries Mendelssohn and Meyerbeer. Wagner wrote that the German people were repelled by Jews due to their alien appearance and behavior - "freaks of Nature" blabbering in "creaking, squeaking, buzzing" voices - "with all our speaking and writing in favour of the Jews' emancipation, we always felt instinctively repelled by any actual, operative contact with them." He argued that Jewish musicians were only capable of producing music that was shallow and artificial, a parroting of true music, for they had no connection to "the genuine spirit of the Folk".
The initial publication of the article attracted little attention, but Wagner republished it as a pamphlet under his own name in 1869, leading to several public protests at performances of Die Meistersinger.
Wagner attacked the Jews in several other essays. In "What is German?" (1878), for example, he wrote that
- The Jew... [took] German intellectual labour into his own hands; and thus we see an odious travesty of the German spirit upheld to-day before the German Folk, as its imputed likeness. It is to be feared, ere long the nation may really take this simulacrum for its mirrored image: then one of the finest natural dispositions in all the human race were done to death, perchance for ever.
Wagner argued for the assimilation of Jews into German culture. In the conclusion to Judenthum (