Opera

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
of any interest, and several seem to belong in some other list (e.g., Pastor’s His-
tory of the Popes). The arrangement, alphabetical by author, is fine for looking
up a known book but unhelpful in discovering what has been written on a
topic or composer.


  1. Sadie, Stanley. History of Opera. The New Grove Handbooks in Music. New
    York: Norton, 1990. xii, 485p. ISBN 0-393-02810-0. ML1700 .H57.
    A useful gathering of material from NG,most of it revised and organized into
    a coherent presentation. Authors include Thomas Walker (Italy), Peter
    Branscombe (Germany and Austria), James R. Anthony (France), Curtis Price
    (England), Jack Sage (Spain), Manfred Boetzkes (design), and Roger Savage
    (production). Without footnotes but with a long, classified bibliography of
    more than 1,000 titles. A strong glossary gives extended information on about
    250 terms. Expansive index.

  2. Jellinek, George. History through the Opera Glass: From the Rise of Caesar to
    the Fall of Napoleon. London: Kahn & Averill, 1994. x, 405p. ISBN 1-8710-
    8247-1. ML2100 .J44.
    A fascinating narrative history of the world, which cites operas that pertain to
    each time and place. Then a chronology of events and operas dealing with
    them, from 14 B.C. to 1993. (What were three operas set in the 14th century?)
    Bibliography of about 100 entries; index of names, titles, and topics.

  3. Lindenberger, Herbert Samuel. Opera in History: From Monteverdi to Cage.
    Stanford, Calif.: Stanford U.P., 1998. xi, 364p. ISBN 0-8047-3104-1. ML1700
    .L54.
    An interesting ramble through numerous topics, although the endeavor to pre-
    sent opera as a sort of paradigmatic model of its times appears to dissolve en
    route. The author’s knowledge and insights are pervasive. He suggests, for
    example, that acting in opera is nothing but a generalized expression of affect,
    having no connection to the character or situation: the aria is a musical pose.
    About the Ring,he observes that the topics concerned are not mythic themes
    but contemporary issues (incest, adultery, rebellion versus authority); the Ring
    actually “helped create a mid–19th century for us” by giving us a framework
    for rethinking the period. There is a good section on Moses und Aron,and on
    Mahaggony,works that Lindenberger takes as seriously as the Ring,and a fine
    account of John Cage’s Europeras,which he takes even more seriously, won-
    dering if they “put the aesthetic of opera in question.” A 400-item bibliogra-
    phy, strong index.

  4. Bokina, John. Opera and Politics: From Monteverdi to Henze. New Haven,
    Conn.: Yale U.P., 1997. xiv, 240p. ISBN 0-300-06935-9. ML1700 .B74.
    Opera seen as the medium “for the recording of the conscious and uncon-
    scious, explicit and implicit, historiography of society.” It achieves this role
    through its libretti (music is not a concern here), which deal with issues and
    ideas of the day. Fidelio,for example, is about “republican virtue” and Elektra
    is about the new psychology. Other themes and libretti are matched as well.


18 Opera


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