Opera

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

  1. Hanning, Barbara. “The Influence of Humanist Thought and Italian Renais-
    sance Poetry on the Formation of Opera.” Ph.D. diss., Yale U., 1969. 374p.

  2. Tomlinson, Gary. Metaphysical Song: An Essay on Opera. Princeton, N.J.:
    Princeton U.P., 1999. x, 192p. ISBN 0-691-00408-0. ML3858 .T66.
    “Opera’s history can be mapped and partitioned according to various super-
    sensible realms it has brought into audible perception and the changing ways it
    has done so.” Tomlinson connects opera with philosophy; it reflects the para-
    digmatic views of its time—in particular, views of the mind/body relation.
    Early opera had no unconscious; it was not yet dualistic. Philosophers looked
    for ways to make soul and substance one. Then the dualism of Descartes was
    accepted and expressed in absolute monarchs who shared human and divine
    attributes; they became central to operatic stories. Mozart, and comic opera
    generally, attacked that absolutism, forecasting Kant’s subjectivity. Don Gio-
    vanni is a self that refuses to be transcended. Kant’s worldview resonates in
    Verdi and his 19th-century contemporaries. Notes, expansive index.

  3. Corse, Sandra. Opera and the Uses of Language: Mozart, Verdi, and Britten.
    Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson U.P., 1987. 163p. ISBN 0-8386-3300-5.
    ML1700. C7.
    “In opera, the aesthetic function of language is reduced in the text because it is
    redistributed to the music. Librettos are literary works in which the literary
    qualities have been to some extent stripped away, so they tend to emphasize
    the communicative function of language rather than its aesthetic function.”
    Thus the “composer reinvents, with a different medium, the ambiguity and
    multiple relationships of literary texts.” As this happens, “music often
    attempts to rescue and resurrect meaning, making meaning possible as a coop-
    erative venture between music and text, composer and librettist, singer and
    audience.” To demonstrate this thesis, Corse offers long program notes on six
    operas. Le nozze di Figarogoes smoothly, with partly acknowledged assistance
    from Siegmund Levarie (#1322), but trouble brews with the ever recalcitrant
    Die Zauberflöte. Music is there found to “undermine or contradict the text.”
    Things are worse in Falstaff,where “the opera itself often works to subvert the
    meaning of Falstaff’s words.” Deconstruction seems forced here, outside its
    comfortable literary demesne. Sometimes music is said to do more than it
    really can, as in Death in Venice,where it is said to describe Aschenbach as “a
    person who is easily led by his emotions into irrational behavior.” Musical
    examples, backnotes, bibliography, index.

  4. Kerman, Joseph. Opera as Drama. 2nd ed. Berkeley: U. of California Press,

  5. xvii, 232p. ISBN 0-520-06273-6. ML3858 .K4.
    First edition, 1956. This edition adds material on Idomeneo,a new chapter on
    operatic criticism, and revisions passim. Kerman gives to music “the central
    articulating function” and judges its quality by how well it “articulates the
    drama.” Since drama in this context equals text, his view places music in the
    service/support role. Kerman’s insistence that music “bears the ultimate
    responsibility for articulating drama” leads him to a favorable evaluation of


Philosophy and Theory of Opera 83

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