Epilogue

2019 ◽  
pp. 213-218
Author(s):  
Emily Richmond Pollock

The Epilogue cites the famous 1967 interview with Pierre Boulez in Der Spiegel, notoriously titled “Blow up the Opera Houses,” to understand the fraught status of modern opera from the postwar period up to the present day. A conflict between the principles of modernism and the canonical idea of opera persists even as more recent composers have found increasingly innovative forms for contemporary opera to take. If musicologists want to fully account for opera’s significance as a public and civic art form, opera history must incorporate not only radical advancements in the genre but also its more moderate and conservative manifestations.

Author(s):  
Parker O'Connor

  In the twenty-first century, many argue that Opera is a dying art form and no one wants to see an opera. However, since 2000 many opera houses have been built around the world in centres without longstanding traditions of opera. As a result architects are now forced to balance the centuries of traditions of opera with a contemporary audience. Architect and city developers have begun to think of inventive ways to use architecture of opera houses as a lure to attract those who might not typically attend the opera. The act of going to the opera begins with the transportation chosen to get there, followed by interaction with the public spaces outside, through the doors into the public lobby, and finally into the auditorium. The opera house can be a space that people do not only go to see a performance but to feel like a part of a community. This integration is developed through the architecture of the opera house and, in particular, the choice of material of glass in many contemporary opera houses. This relationship of community inside versus outside the opera house is permeable through this glass wall. Understanding the opera house as a creator of community allows for opera to remain an integral part of culture moving further into the twenty-first century.


Author(s):  
Mark Berry

This chapter compares interventions in the shaping of the operatic canon by Richard Wagner and Pierre Boulez, proposing that those of the latter, increasingly influenced by the former, proved as influential on the Modernism of the second half of the twentieth century as Wagner’s had during the first half. Both were guided by markedly Hegelian thinking, in terms of dialectics (the chapter stresses that all canonic discourse is dialectical) and of idealism (reshaping the past in their own Modernist image). Both, moreover, also had first-hand practical experience of the realities—especially the frustrations—of operatic repertory production as conductors, giving rise to different yet related Modernist critiques. Their perspectives resulted not only in the same kind of self-programming as canonic reform but also ultimately in their similar stances toward the canon. This chapter is paired with Cormac Newark’s “Canons of the Risorgimento then and now.”


Author(s):  
Emily Richmond Pollock

This chapter explores the historical and institutional basis for the West German renewal of opera in the postwar period. The chapter presents narratives of individuals involved in the creation of opera to contextualize opera’s restoration after 1945. Significant personnel continuity in the operatic ecosystem before, during, and after the Third Reich meant that the postwar opera industry was populated by men and women whose recent experiences included National Socialist ideology, military service, Allied bombing, the loss of family members, displacement, hunger, forced labor, imprisonment, and denazification. The chapter also sketches the institutional basis of contemporary opera, discussing seven opera companies and surveying the position of new and recent works within the postwar repertoire. From this survey, we see how the production of new operas enhanced companies’ prestige and was motivated by a perceived duty to promote modern composers, to challenge audiences, and to advance opera as a living art form.


1993 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 2071-2106
Author(s):  
Philippe Clément ◽  
Raúl Manásevich ◽  
Enzo Mitidieri

Author(s):  
Fiona Sampson

Today, poetry and art music occupy similar cultural positions: each has a tendency to be regarded as problematic, ‘difficult’, and therefore ‘elitist’. Despite this, the audiences and numbers of participants for each are substantial: yet they tend not to overlap. This is odd, because the forms share early history in song and saga, and have some striking similarities, often summed up in the word ‘lyric’? These similarities include much that is most significant to the experience of each, and so of most interest to practitioners and audiences. They encompass, at the very least: the way each art-form is aural, and takes place in time; a shared reliance on temporal, rather than spatial, forms; an engagement with sensory experience and pleasure; availability for both shared public performance and private reading, sight-reading, and hearing in memory; and scope for non-denotative meaning. In other words, looking at these elements in music is a way to look at them in poetry, and vice versa. This is a study of these two formal craft traditions that is concerned with the similarities in their roles, structures, projects, and capacities.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-109
Author(s):  
Kristen Marangoni

The enigmatic setting of Beckett's novel Watt has been compared to places as diverse as an insane asylum, a boarding school, a womb, and a concentration camp. Watt's experience at Knott's house does seem suggestive of all of these, and yet it may more readily conform to the setting of a monastery. The novel is filled with chants, meditations, choral arrangements, hierarchical classifications, and even silence, all highly evocative of a monastic lifestyle. Some of Watt's dialogue (such as his requests for forgiveness or reflections on the nature of mankind) further echoes various Catholic liturgies. Watt finds little solace in these activities, however. He feels that they are largely rote and purposeless as they are focused on Knott, a figure who in many ways defies linguistic description and physical know-ability. Watt's meditations and rituals become, then, empty catechisms without answers, something that is reflected in the extreme difficulty that Watt has communicating. In the face of linguistic and liturgical instability, the Watt notebooks present a counter reading that can be found in the thousand plus doodles that line its pages. The drawings reinforce as well as subvert their textual counterpart, and they function in many ways as the images in medieval illuminated manuscripts. The doodles in Watt often take the form of decorative letters, elaborate marginal drawings, and depictions of a variety of people and animals, and many of its doodles offer uncanny resemblances in form or theme to those in illuminated manuscripts like The Book of Kells. Doodles of saints, monks, crosses, and scribes even give an occasional pictorial nod to the monastic setting in which illuminated manuscripts were usually produced (and remind us of the monastic conditions in which Beckett found himself writing much of Watt). Beckett's doodles not only channel this medium of illuminated manuscripts, they also modernize its application. Instead of neat geometric shapes extending down the page, his geometric doodle sequences are often abstracted, fragmented, and nonlinear. Beckett also occasionally modernized the content of illuminated manuscripts: instead of the traditional sacramental communion table filled with candles, bread and wine, Beckett doodles a science lab table where Bunsen burners replaces candles and wine glasses function as beakers. It is through these modernized images that Watt attempts to draw contemporary relevance from a classic art form and to restore (at least partial) meaning to rote traditions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-54
Author(s):  
Fiona Haig

Democratic centralism was the Leninist-Bolshevik pyramidal model of internal organization in operation in all communist parties for most of the 20th century. Thus far, the question of whether it functioned consistently across the non-ruling parties has not been addressed explicitly or systematically. This article examines the implementation of this essential internal dynamic in a French and an Italian communist party federation in the early postwar period. Drawing on new personal testimonies from more than 50 informants, and inedita archival evidence, this analysis reveals not only similarities but also clear functional disparities between the two cases.


1950 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-163
Author(s):  
Rudy Bretz
Keyword(s):  

1967 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 28-31
Author(s):  
Max Kozloff

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