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Opera in Postwar Venice: Cultural Politics and the Avant-Garde (Cambridge Studies in Opera)
Cambridge University Press, 9/13/2018
EAN 9781107169272, ISBN10: 1107169275
Hardcover, 240 pages, 25.3 x 17.9 x 1.7 cm
Language: English
Beginning from the unlikely vantage point of Venice in the aftermath of fascism and World War II, this book explores operatic production in the city's nascent postwar culture as a lens onto the relationship between opera and politics in the twentieth century. Both opera and Venice in the middle of the century are often talked about in strikingly similar terms: as museums locked in the past and blind to the future. These clichés are here overturned: perceptions of crisis were in fact remarkably productive for opera, and despite being physically locked in the past, Venice was undergoing a flourishing of avant-garde activity. Focusing on a local musical culture, Harriet Boyd-Bennett recasts some of the major composers, works, stylistic categories and narratives of twentieth-century music. The study provides fresh understandings of works by composers as diverse as Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Verdi, Britten and Nono.
List of figures and music examples
Acknowledgements
Note on translations
Introduction
1. Stravinsky's timely excavations, 1951
2. A Futura Memoria
Verdi's Attila, 1951
3. Spectral opera
Britten's The Turn of the Screw, 1954
4. Magic and realism in Prokofiev's The Fiery Angel, 1955
5. Open works/staging crisis, 1959
6. Noisy echoes in Luigi Nono's Intolleranza 1960, 1961
Bibliography.