Book contents
- Italian Opera in Global and Transnational Perspective
- Italian Opera in Global and Transnational Perspective
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Examples
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Opera and Italianità in Transnational and Global Perspective
- 2 Giving Singers a Voice
- 3 Nina d’Aubigny’s ‘Italian Voice’
- 4 Italian Opera and Creole Identities
- 5 Italian Opera in Vormärz Vienna
- 6 Southern Exchanges
- 7 ‘For a Moment, I Felt Like I Was Back in Italy’
- 8 Reimagining Rossini
- 9 From Heaven and Hell to the Grail Hall via Sant’Andrea della Valle
- 10 Arcadia Undone
- 11 Italian Impresarios, American Minstrels and Parsi Theatre
- 12 German National Identity and Operatic Italianità
- 13 (Opera) Fever in Belle Époque Manaus
- 14 Between ‘Sung Theatre’ and Asakusa Opera
- 15 Epilogue
- Index
15 - Epilogue
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2022
- Italian Opera in Global and Transnational Perspective
- Italian Opera in Global and Transnational Perspective
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Examples
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Opera and Italianità in Transnational and Global Perspective
- 2 Giving Singers a Voice
- 3 Nina d’Aubigny’s ‘Italian Voice’
- 4 Italian Opera and Creole Identities
- 5 Italian Opera in Vormärz Vienna
- 6 Southern Exchanges
- 7 ‘For a Moment, I Felt Like I Was Back in Italy’
- 8 Reimagining Rossini
- 9 From Heaven and Hell to the Grail Hall via Sant’Andrea della Valle
- 10 Arcadia Undone
- 11 Italian Impresarios, American Minstrels and Parsi Theatre
- 12 German National Identity and Operatic Italianità
- 13 (Opera) Fever in Belle Époque Manaus
- 14 Between ‘Sung Theatre’ and Asakusa Opera
- 15 Epilogue
- Index
Summary
The Epilogue revisits the concepts of italianità and operatic italianità within the changing context of the historiography on Italian opera and opera in Italy. Looking back at the volume as a whole, it compares how its authors frame the multifaceted idea of Italian opera within the increasingly globalised world of the nineteenth century. Viewed through the prism of italianità, Italian opera frequently takes the form of a nostalgic fantasy for something already lost, or something imagined elsewhere. Such an elsewhere might be Italy itself, idealised as pastoral idyll or land of song. Just as often, though, it is conceived more broadly, mediated via local traditions or conditions or via another place, whether Paris, Vienna or Cuba. Alternatively, it can be dispersed more widely still, across the expanding global network of opera houses performing Italian opera at the time: in the words of an Ecuadorian critic quoted in one of the chapters, ‘we can feel, for a night, as if we were in Lima, or Janeiro, or Paris, London, Madrid or Milan’.
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- Italian Opera in Global and Transnational PerspectiveReimagining Italianità in the Long Nineteenth Century, pp. 298 - 303Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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