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Faust
*** Shopping-Tip: Faust
{{otheruses}}
'''Faust''' (
Latin '''Faustus''') is the protagonist of a popular
Germany German tale of a
pact with the Devil, assumed to be based on the figure of the German magician and alchemist Dr.
Johann Georg Faust (approximately
1480-
1540). It has been used as the basis for many different
fiction fictional works, most notably by
Christopher Marlowe,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
Klaus Mann,
Thomas Mann, and
Mikhail Bulgakov.
General Plot
The story concerns the fate of a learned gentleman named Faust, who in his quest for forbidden or advanced knowledge of material things, summons the
Devil (represented by
Mephistopheles, often also referred to as Mephisto), who offers to serve him for a period of time, at the cost of his
soul.
Origin
While some scholars believe the story of ''Faust'' originated in Northern Germany, committed to print in
1587 with the publishing of a little
chapbook bearing the title ''Historia von D. Iohan Fausten'', other scholars are quick to note that ''historia'' is
Latin for ''Geschichte'' (German word for ''story'' or ''history'') and Iohan is Latin for ''Johann.'' The choice of languages implies the existence of an even earlier, independent source in Latin, such as that which
Jacob Bidermann used for his treatment of the legend of the Damnation of the Good Doctor of Paris,
Cenodoxus.
However, in the late fourteenth or early fifteenth century a Dutch play attributed to Anna Bijns appeared which offers a template for the Faustus legend. "Mary of Nijmeghen" dramatizes the story of a young woman convinced by a demon, One-Eyed Moenen, to sell her soul to learn the seven liberal arts. She lives a dissolute life for some time until, moved by a morality play, she regrets her bargain and seeks forgiveness. Unlike Faustus, Mary repents and, after a long penitence, receives her reward in heaven.
In either case, the little chapbook, already in circulation in Northern Germany, found its way to England where it was translated into English by a certain "P. F., Gent[leman]" in
1592 as ''The Historie of the Damnable Life, and Deserved Death of Doctor Iohn Faustus'' (unpreserved). It was this work that Christopher Marlowe used for his somewhat more ambitious play, ''
The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus'' (published c.
1600). Additionally, Marlowe borrowed from
Acts and Monuments by
John Foxe, on the exchanges between Pope Adrian and a rival pope. Another possible inspiration of Marlowe's version is
John Dee (1527-1609), who practised forms of
alchemy and science and developed
Enochian magic.
Along with
Jacob Bidermann's
Cenodoxus (published c.
1602), Marlowe's version served to inspire the later ''
Faust, Part 1'' by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, which may be considered the more definitive classical work.
History
The Faust tale is a variation of the story about a negotiated
pact with the Devil pact between man and the devil, involving human hubris and diabolic cunning; the oldest extant version is the tale of
Theophilus of Adana.
The origin of the protagonist's name and persona remains unclear. It is widely assumed to be based on the figure of the German magician and alchemist Dr.
Johann Georg Faust (approximately
1480-
1540), a dubious magician and alchemist probably from
Knittlingen, Germany Knittlingen,
Württemberg, who obtained a degree in divinity from
Heidelberg University in 1509. According to one account Faust's poor reputation became legendary while he was in prison, where in exchange for wine he "offered to show a chaplain how to remove hair from his face without a razor; the chaplain provided the wine and Faustus provided the chaplain with a salve of
arsenic, which removed not only the hair but the flesh."
#Sources (Barnett) Martin Luther and
Philipp Melanchthon are said to have alleged Faust's companionship with the devil.
However, it is also possible that the name "Faust" (German for "fist") is related to
Italian language Italian "fausto". Fausto is possibly derived from the Latin adjective "faustus", meaning "auspicious" or "lucky". There may also be a connection with the ''fustum'' (Latin for "doctor's staff") of
Aesculapius and other doctors of the time, an item likely to have figured prominently in the Legend of the Damnation of the Good Doctor of Paris,
Cenodoxus, which also was an influence on Goethe's version.
The name of "Faust" has since become attached to any number of legendary tales about a charlatan
alchemy alchemist (some claim "
astrologer and
necromancer"), whose pride, vanity, and vile hucksterism would inevitably lead to his doom. Similarly, the adjective "
faustian" has come to denote any acts or constellations that involve human hubris leading to doom.
In
Poland Polish folklore there exists a tale with a
Pan Twardowski in a role similar to Faust's, which seems to have originated roughly at the same time. It is unclear if and to what extent the two tales have a common origin or influenced each other. The figure of Pan Twardowski is supposedly based on a
16th century German emigrant to
Kraków, then the Polish capital. According to Melanchthon, the historic Johann Faust had studied in Kraków, as well.
Works which retell or allude to the Faust tale
Drama
* Anonymous - ''
Historia von D. Iohan Fausten (1587)
* Jacob Bidermann - ''
Cenodoxus (1602)
*
Christopher Marlowe's ''
The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus'' (1604~1610)
*
Gotthold Lessing Gotthold Lessing's play, ''Doktor Faustus'', mentioned in a contribution to a magazine (1759), but otherwise left unfinished, but collected and published posthumously (1784) in its original, incomplete form
*
Dorothy L. Sayers's ''The Devil to Pay''
*
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's
Faust Part 1 ''Faust'', Part One
*
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's
Faust Part 2 ''Faust'', Part Two
*
Gertrude Stein's ''
Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights''
*
Michel Carre's ''
Faust et Marguerite''
*
Mark Ravenhill's ''
Faust is Dead''
*
David Mamet's ''
Faustus (Mamet play) Faustus''
Opera
*
Konrad Boehmer's ''Doktor Faustus'' (
1983), libretto by
Hugo Claus
*
Arrigo Boito's ''
Mefistofele'' (
1868)
*
Havergal Brian's ''Faust''
*
Ferruccio Busoni's ''
Doktor Faust (opera) Doktor Faust'' (
1916-
1925 25)
*
D'Hervé's ''Le Petit Faust''
*
Charles Gounod's ''
Faust (opera) Faust'' (
1859)
*
Sergei Prokofiev's opera based on Bryusov's ''
The Fiery Angel''
*
Ludwig Spohr's ''Faust''
*
Heinrich Zoellner's ''Faust''`
*
Alfred Schnittke's ''
Historia von D. Johann Fausten''
*
Igor Stravinsky's ''
The Rake's Progress''
Music
*
Frank Zappa's "Titties & Beer", from the album "Zappa in New York" and others, has the Devil stealing the protagonist's large-breasted girlfriend and their beer, and demands he make a deal to get them back.
* The second movement of
Charles-Valentin Alkan's Grande Sonate (published
1848)
*
Hector Berlioz's ''
The Damnation of Faust'' (
1845-
1846 46) (sometimes performed in staged opera versions)
*
Ludwig van Beethoven's Opus 75 no 3 (
1809) Song - Aus
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Goethes Faust: "Es war einmal ein König"
** Interestingly enough,
Trans-Siberian Orchestra's album
Beethoven's Last Night includes Faustian references; Beethoven in a deal with Mephistopheles must choose between his, possibly fictional, tenth symphony or his soul.
*
Charles Gounod's Ballet music from his opera ''
Faust (opera) Faust'' (1859). The ballet occurs as an interlude in the Fourth Act during the Walpurgis Night scene familiar from Goethe's ''Faust Part 1''. The ballet or ballet music is often performed independent of the opera.
*
Franz Liszt was fascinated by the Faust legend, particularly with the character of Mephistopheles. He wrote several musical works on this idea, including:
**''
Faust Symphony'' (
1854-
1857 57)
**"
Two Episodes based on Lenau's Faust," the second of which is the famous "
Mephisto Waltzes Mephisto Waltz No. 1"
**"
Mephisto Waltzes" (4)
*
Gothic rock band
Mephisto Waltz, probably based on
Franz Liszt Liszt's
Mephisto Waltzes.
* Part II of
Gustav Mahler's ''
Symphony No. 8 (Mahler) Symphony No. 8'' (
1906-
1907 07)
*
Murdoc Niccals, bassist of the
United Kingdom British animated band
Gorillaz, claims he had sold his soul to the devil so that the album
Demon Days would succeed, and that his middle name was Faust.
*
Modest Mussorgsky: "Mephistopheles' song of the flea", is just that: a version of the song that Mephistopheles sings in the tavern scene of Goethe's ''Faust'', pt. 1.
*
Randy Newman's ''
Randy Newman's Faust Faust'' (1993)
*
Alfred Schnittke's
Faust Cantata'' (
1982-
1983 83)
*
Franz Schubert's ''
Gretchen am Spinnrade'' (
1814)
*
Robert Schumann's ''
Scenes from Goethe's Faust'' (completed
1853)
*
Igor Stravinsky's
Histoire du Soldat (1918) tells the story of a soldier who trades his fiddle to the devil for a book that predicts the future of the economy.
*
Richard Wagner's ''
Faust (overture) Faust'' overture (
1840, originally intended as the first movement of a ''Faust''
symphony)
*
Art Zoyd's song ''Faust''.
*
The Fall (band) The Fall's song ''Dktr Faustus'' (
1986), also known as ''Faust Banana''.
*
The Charlie Daniels Band's 1979 hit "
The Devil Went Down to Georgia"
*
Avant-garde/
black metal progressive black metal band
Arcturus's album, ''
La Masquerade Infernale'' (
1997) alludes to the tale and is dedicated to the "Faustian spirit".
*
United States American/
Norway Norwegian melodic
power metal band
Kamelot's albums, ''
Epica (album) Epica'' (
2003) and ''
The Black Halo (album) The Black Halo'' (
2005) are a two-part adaptation of the Faust legend.
*
Brian DePalma's ''
Phantom of the Paradise'' (both the plot of the movie and a musical incorporated into the movie, titled "Foster", are based on the legend of Faust).
* British
Rock and roll Rock band
Muse's song 'The Small Print', from the album
Absolution (album) Absolution, describing the plight of Faust from the viewpoint of the Devil. The song's working title was "Action Faust".
* Popular British
black metal band '
Cradle of Filth' have a song entitled [http://www.lyricsbox.com/cradle-of-filth-lyrics-absinthe-with-faust-fl827km.html 'Absinthe With Faust']on their 2004 'Nymphetamine' album.
*
John Coolidge Adams John Adams' new opera "
Doctor Atomic" was originally commissioned as an American Faust telling, and the composer admits that the opera still retains Faustian elements. Its subject matter is
Robert Oppenheimer and the
Manhattan Project.
*English Band Dr. Faustus [http://www.musicinscotland.com/acatalog/Dr_Faustus.html]
*
Brazilian death metal band
Mystifier released a song on their album ''Wicca/Göetia'' entitled "The True Story about Doctor Faust's Pact with Mephistopheles".
*Norwegian Black Metal act "Emperor" briefly contained a member who used the pseudonym Faust, he was imprisoned for murder in 1993 and has since been released
* Greek
death metal band
Septic Flesh's last album, Sumerian Daemons, contains a song called Faust.
* In 2006 the German composer Ernst Heckel and the English writer Richard Bunting published a modern rock musical titled "Faust".
* The texts of the
The Netherlands Dutch composer
Alexander Comitas' ''Walpurgisnacht'', a piece for fanfare band and choir, come from Goethe's ''Faust''.
* American
Power Metal band
Kamelot's 2003 album
Epica (album) Epica, is a concept album loosely based on Goethe's ''Faust', the story were then continued on their 2005 release:
The Black Halo (album) The Black Halo.
The Small Print by
muse , this song was inspirated by Faust, also the Band called the song
action faust but they change the name to, The Small Print.
Poetry
*
Heinrich Heine's "
Der Doktor Faust"
*
Carol Ann Duffy's "
Mrs Faust"
*
Delmore Schwartz's "Faust in Old Age"[http://www.poemhunter.com/p/m/poem.asp?poet=9700&poem=87586]
*
Dale Pendell's "
Pharmako Gnosis"
Prose fiction
*
William Beckford's "
Vathek"
*
Valery Bryusov's ''
The Fiery Angel'': the tavern scene from Goethe's ''Faust, Part 1'', is spliced into the rest of Bryusov's storyline.
*
Mikhail Bulgakov's ''
The Master and Margarita''
*
Adelbert von Chamisso's ''
Peter Schlemihl's Remarkable Story'' (''Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte'', 1814)
*
Joseph Conrad’s “
Heart of Darkness"
*
Carl Deuker's ''On the Devil's Court''
*
Philip K. Dick's ''
Galactic Pot-Healer''
*
Samuel Adams Drake's ''
Jonathan Moulton and the Devil''
*
João Guimarães Rosa's Grande Sertão: Veredas (
The Devil to Pay in the Backlands)
*
Thomas Harris's ''
Silence of the Lambs''
*
Herman Hesse's ''
Demian''
*
Tom Holt's ''
Faust Among Equals''
*
Washington Irving's "
The Devil and Tom Walker"
*
Ed Kleiman’s “
North End Faust"
*
Alfred Jarry's ''Faustroll''
*
Gaston Leroux's ''
The Phantom of the Opera''
*
Thomas Mann's ''
Doktor Faustus''
*
Klaus Mann's ''
Mephisto''
*
Charles Maturin's ''
Melmoth the Wanderer''
*
Terry Pratchett's ''
Eric (novel) Faust Eric''
*
Michael Swanwick's ''
Jack Faust''
*
Ivan Turgenev's ''
Faust (novella) Faust''
*
Douglass Wallop's ''The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant''
*
Oscar Wilde's ''
The Picture of Dorian Gray''
*
Zoran Živković (writer) Zoran Živković's ''
Time-gifts''
*
Matthew Lewis's ''
The Monk''
Movies
*
F. W. Murnau's ''
Faust (1926 film) Faust'' (1926)
* ''
The Band Wagon''
*
Peter Cook and
Dudley Moores ''
Bedazzled (1967 movie) Bedazzled'' (
1967),
Bedazzled (2000 movie) remade in 2000.
*
Brian De Palma's ''
Phantom of the Paradise'' (
1974)
*
Jan Svankmajer's ''
Faust (1994 film)'' (
1994)
* ''
I Was A Teenage Faust''
*
Rowdy Herrington's ''
A Murder Of Crows''
*
�lex Ollé's ''
Fausto (film) Fausto 5.0''
*
István Szabó István Szabó's ''
Mephisto (1981 film)''
*
Stephen King's ''
Needful Things Needful Things'' (1993)
*
Walter Hill's ''
Crossroads (1986 film) Crossroads'' (1986)
* ''
Angel Heart'' (1987)
*
Brian Yuzna's ''
Faust: Love of the Damned'' (2001)
* ''
Tombstone (film) Tombstone'' (1993)
*
Alex Ollé & Isidro Ortiz 's ''
Fausto 5.0'' (2001)
*
Eric Leisers's ''
Faustbook'' (2006)
Starring Jacob Faust
www.albinofawn.com/faust
* Richard Burton and Nevill Coghill's ''Doctor Faustus'' (1967)
Musicals
*
Randy Newman's ''
Randy Newman's Faust Faust''
* ''
The Little Shop of Horrors'', and the stage version ''
Little Shop of Horrors'', as well as the movie version of the stage version, ''
Little Shop of Horrors''
* ''
Damn Yankees''
*
The Devil Went Down to Georgia
Anime and manga
* ''
Shaman King'' (A character in ''Shaman King'', Faust VIII, is a descendant of Dr. Faust)
* ''
Saber Marionette'' (The antagonistic ruler of the kingdom of Gartlant in Saber Marionette J)
* Faust Münchhausen (a villain seen in the ''
Urotsukidoji'' movies)
* Deel Faust (The impish kid Devil General of Wind in "''Devil'' (&)'' Devil''")
Video games
* Stauf, the main character in
The 7th Guest is an anagram of "Faust".
* Faustus is the name of a minor villain in ''
Blood Omen 2: Legacy of Kain''
* ''
Guilty Gear'' series, "Faust" (''Guilty Gear X'', ''Guilty Gear XX'')
*
Max Payne, in which the mob member Jack Lupino is attempting the "Faustian deal".
* Dr. Faustus was a character in the cancelled Playstation 1 game, "Thrill Kill."
* In the
Soul Caliber series, Faust is the name of
Siegfried Schtauffen's first sword. Additionally the character
Nightmare is what Siegfried becomes after laying hands on the demon blade and losing his soul.
* Faust is a secret boss in the Playstation 1 game "
The Legend of Dragoon"
* Faust is a notorious monster (in this case, a giant arcane "doll" (robot) creature) in
Final Fantasy XI.
* Faust: The Seven Games of the Soul (PC Game - very loosely based on Goethe's Faust).
*In the opening cutscene of the PlayStation 1 game
Xenogears, one of the computer operators reports that Deus has accessed the 'Control System Faust', which it uses to alter the Eldridge's course.
Comic books
* The comic book Faust was published in the
1980s 80s and
1990s 90s by artist
Tim Vigil and writer
David Quinn (writer)|David Quinn]]. The book follows a story template similar to the opera Faust, but is an updated version. Rebel Studios, an independent label originally published it, but it was later picked up by
Avatar Press and a subsequent sequel series was created. Both are extremely sexual and violent series.
*
Felix Faust is a magical
supervillain in the universe of
DC Comics. He appeared first in
1962 as an adversary of the
Justice League Justice League of America.
* Jack Faust was the name of a magician in
Alan Moore's series ''
Promethea'', and is also referred to in other books from the
America's Best Comics imprint.
*In
Help!, Volume 2, Number 1, February 1962,
Harvey Kurtzman and
Will Elder produced "Goodman Goes Playboy." In it,
Goodman Beaver sells his soul to
Mephistopheles in order to gain the material and sexual benefits that were extolled monthly in
Playboy magazine. This comic strip, however, was legally suppressed by the creators of
Archie Comics because it disparaged their cartoon character and his companions.
* Dr. John Dee, a Renaissance scholar who was a likely inspiration for Marlowe's version of the "Faust" story, is a character in
Neil Gaiman's ''
The Sandman (DC Comics Modern Age) Sandman'' series, published by
DC Comics'
Vertigo (comics) Vertigo imprint.
* The fifth chapter of
Alan Moore's ''
V for Vendetta'' references Faust, and the deal he made.
Nonfiction
*
Bertrand Russell's
essay "
A Free Man's Worship"
*
Oswald Spengler's book "
The Decline of the West" labeled Western society as 'Faustian'
Pen name
"Minister Faust" is a
pen name for
Canada Canadian writer, broadcaster and activist
Malcolm Azania; as Minister Faust, he wrote the
science fiction novel and social
satire ''
The Coyote Kings of the Space-Age Bachelor Pad''.
See also
*
Walpurgis Night
*
The Brocken a.k.a. Blocksberg
*
Glory (optical phenomenon) Brocken specter
*
Jonathan Moulton, the "Yankee Faust"
*
Pan Twardowski, the "Polish Faust"
*
Friedrich Nietzsche
Sources
'''''Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe''''', ''Edited and with and introduction by
Sylvan Barnett'' (1969, Signet Classics)
External links
{{wikiquote}}
-
Devilish Deeds in Staufen
-
Pacts with the Devil: Faust and Precursors
*E-texts:
**{{gutenberg|no=14591|name=Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe}}
**{{gutenberg|no=779|name=Tragical History of Dr. Faustus}} (
Quarto of 1604)
**{{gutenberg|no=811|name=Tragical History of Dr. Faustus}} (Quarto of 1616)
**At Projekt Gutenberg-DE:
**
-
Goethe's ''Faust'', part 1
**
-
Goethe's ''Faust'', part 2
**
-
Heine's ''Der Doktor Faust''
*
-
Marlowe's ''Dr. Faustus''
-
Jan Svankmajer's Faust
-
The Pre-Death Thoughts of Faust by Nikolai Berdyaev
Category:Characters in written fiction
Category:European folklore
Category:Fictional alchemists
Category:Fictional magicians
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