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Title Modernism and opera / edited by Richard Begam and Matthew Wilson Smith.

Publication Info. Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource.
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Series Hopkins studies in modernism
Hopkins studies in modernism.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary At first glance, modernism and opera may seem like strange bedfellows-the former hostile to sentiment, the latter wearing its heart on its sleeve. And yet these apparent opposites attract: many operas are aesthetically avant-garde, politically subversive, and socially transgressive. From the proto-modernist strains of Richard Wagner's Parsifal through the twenty-first-century modernism of Kaija Saariaho's L'amour de loin, the duet between modernism and opera, at turns harmonious and dissonant, has been one of the central artistic events of modernity. Despite this centrality, scholars of modernist literature only rarely venture into opera, and music scholars generally return the favor by leaving literature to one side. But opera, that grand cauldron of the arts, demands that scholars, too, share the stage with one another. In Modernism and Opera, Richard Begam and Matthew Wilson Smith bring together musicologists, literary critics, and theater scholars for the first time in a mutual endeavor to trace certain key moments in the history of modernism and opera.
Contents Cover; Half-title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; I: World War I and Before: Crises of Gender and Theatricality; 1. Laughing at the Redeemer: Kundry and the Paradox of Parsifal; 2. Maeterlinck, Debussy, and Modernism; 3. Echoes of the Self: Cosmic Loneliness in Bartók's Duke Bluebeard's Castle; II: Interwar Modernism: Movement and Countermovement; 4. The Great War and Its Aftermath: Strauss and Hofmannsthal's "Third-Way Modernism"; 5. Adorno's Shifting Wozzeck.
6. Many Modernisms, Two Makropulos Cases: Čapek, Janáček, and the Shifting Avant-Gardes of Interwar Prague7. Schoenberg, Modernism, and Degeneracy; 8. Gertrude Stein, Minimalism, and Modern Opera; III: Opera after World War II: Tensions of Institutional Modernism; 9. Stravinsky, Auden, and the Midcentury Modernism of The Rake's Progress; 10. Gloriana and the New Elizabethan Age; 11. One Saint in Eight Tableaux: The Untimely Modernism of Olivier Messiaen's Saint François d'Assise; 12. Saariaho's L'Amour de Loin: Modernist Opera in the Twenty-First Century; Contributors; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F.
GH; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; X; Y; Z.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Opera -- 20th century.
Opera.
Chronological Term 20th century
Subject Modernism (Music)
Modernism (Music)
Chronological Term 1900-1999
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Added Author Begam, Richard, 1950- editor.
Smith, Matthew Wilson, editor.
Other Form: Print version: Modernism and opera. Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016 9781421420622 (DLC) 2015047645 (OCoLC)932003648
ISBN 9781421420639 (electronic book)
1421420635 (electronic book)
1421420635 (electronic)
9781421420622
1421420627