基本説明
Uses insights from diverse areas such as recent neuroscience and social thought to rethink the nature of opera, exemplifying opera studies as an emerging field of interdisciplinary study.
Full Description
Setting opera within a variety of contexts - social, aesthetic, historical - Lindenberger illuminates a form that has persisted in recognizable shape for over four centuries. The study examines the social entanglements of opera, for example the relation of Mozart's Abduction from the Seraglio and Verdi's Il trovatore to its initial and later audiences. It shows how modernist opera rethought the nature of theatricality and often challenged its viewers by means of both musical and theatrical shock effects. Using recent experiments in neuroscience, the book demonstrates how different operatic forms developed at different periods to create new ways of exciting a public. Lindenberger considers selected moments of operatic history from Monteverdi's Orfeo to the present to study how the form has communicated with its diverse audiences. Of interest to scholars and operagoers alike, this book advocates and exemplifies opera studies as an active, emerging area of interdisciplinary study.
Contents
Prologue. Why opera? Why (how, where) situate?; 1. Anatomy of a war horse: Il trovatore from A to Z; 2. On opera and society (assuming a relationship); 3. Opera and the novel: antithetical or complementary?; 4. Opera by other means; 5. Opera and/as lyric; 6. From separatism to unity: aesthetic theorizing from Reynolds to Wagner; 7. Toward a characterization of modernist opera; 8. Anti-theatricality in twentieth-century opera; 9. A brief consumer's history of opera; Epilogue. Why (what, how, if) opera studies?; Works cited.



