Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 235 mm
Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 235 mm
ISBN: 978-0-19-778039-8
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Childhood and the Operatic Imaginary since 1900 addresses a stark reality: Opera Studies has neglected its children. Opera scholarship has been complicit in othering children and childhoods, disregarding repertoire for, by, and about children as well as its creators. This volume tilts Opera Studies off its adult-centric axis by focusing on children as characters, creators, performers, and audiences. The gender biases that have plagued children's literature and its related study as inherently feminine and thus subordinate are also evident in the historical appraisal of children's operas and its imbalanced representation in scholarship. Similarly, Opera Studies has primarily focused on white, Eurocentric traditions from the Global North. This volume models an inclusive Opera Studies, exploring the myriad relationships between children, childhood, and opera to address two fundamental questions:
1. What functions do children serve for opera?
2. What functions does opera serve for children?
These questions are answered primarily by bringing Opera Studies into dialogue with Childhood Studies, but numerous other fields are engaged throughout the volume such as Education, Ethnomusicology, Voice Studies, African American Studies, History, English and Comparative Literature, and Musicology.
Editors Joy H. Calico and Justin Vickers, together with the roster of contributors, examine repertoire in a broad range of sociohistorical contexts, across four continents, to theorize a new line of inquiry for Opera Studies: the confluence of childhood and the operatic imaginary.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
- Chapter 1: Joy H. Calico and Justin Vickers: Childhood and the Operatic Imaginary
- Chapter 2: Linda Hutcheon and Michael Hutcheon: "What We Have Made of Them": The "Signifying Power" and Changing Dramatic Functions of Children in Opera for Adults
- Chapter 3: Isidora Miranda: Innocence and Empire: Children's Performance on the Lyrical Stages of Manila in the Early Twentieth Century
- Chapter 4: Nancy Yunhwa Rao: Children's Opera, New Culture Movement, and From Pixie to Nymph: The Grape Fairyè¡èä'å (1922)
- Chapter 5: Teryl L. Dobbs: Tracing Brundibár, Dismantling Its Hopescape: Inception, Lehrstück, and Difficult Knowledge
- Chapter 6: Justin Vickers: Entertainments, the Miraculous, and a Place of Refuge in Benjamin Britten's Children's Operas
- Chapter 7: Danielle Ward-Griffin: A Fantasy for All Ages: Lukas Foss's Griffelkin, Family Viewing, and Televised Opera in 1950s America
- Chapter 8: Anicia Chung Timberlake: "You Can Only Move Forward in New Shoes": Kurt Schwaen, Imagination, and the Future
- Chapter 9: Nicholas Jones: Operas and Music-Theater Works for Children "To Play and Sing": Peter Maxwell Davies on the Stage
- Chapter 10: Lena van der Hoven: Children as Bearers of South Africa's Future in Post-Apartheid Opera
- Chapter 11: Philip Rupprecht: Judith Weir and the Figure of the Orphan
- Chapter 12: Michal Grover-Friedlander: Opera's Silent Children
- Chapter 13: Colleen Renihan: Childhood Trauma and the Ethics of Dark Operatic Tourism
- Chapter 14: Laurel E. Zeiss: Bilingual Texts, Transnational Music: Intertextuality and Adaptation in Monkey See, Monkey Do and Frida Kahlo and the Bravest Girl in the World
- Chapter 15: Allison R. Smith, Allison Michele Lewis, and Naomi André: Storytelling, Play, and Memory: The Roles of Black Children in Constructing Transatlantic Opera Epistemologies




