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Cambridge Studies in Opera

This series explores the multifaceted world of opera and its broad cultural significance in contemporary society. It embraces a diverse range of scholarly methodologies, from musicological analyses of composers and works to the application of critical theories from other humanities disciplines. It serves as a vital forum for current research, offering fresh perspectives on this evolving art form.

Opera in Postwar Venice
Verdi, Opera, Women
The Rival Sirens
Sentimental Opera
Saint-Saens and the Stage
  • Designed as a resource for opera lovers, opera professionals, and music students, this book provides a guide to Saint-Saens's twelve operas and a variety of other stage works for those who are curious to know more. It will enhance listeners' experience of recordings of Saint-Saens, which are enjoying increased popularity as his centenary approaches.

    Saint-Saens and the Stage
    4.0
  • Sentimental Opera

    • 297 pages
    • 11 hours of reading

    Castelvecchi presents a critical re-evaluation of the operatic genre system and the cult of sensibility in the age of Mozart.

    Sentimental Opera
  • The Rival Sirens

    • 307 pages
    • 11 hours of reading

    This new approach to the operas of Handel examines the vital and intertwined roles of singers, audiences and local cultural context in creating eighteenth- century opera. It emphasises cultural context and aspects of performance, offering a range of interpretative tools not previously exploited in studies of the century's opera before Mozart.

    The Rival Sirens
  • Verdi, Opera, Women

    • 306 pages
    • 11 hours of reading

    Susan Rutherford explores Verdi's operas in the context of women's social, cultural and political history in nineteenth-century Italy.

    Verdi, Opera, Women
  • Boyd-Bennett investigates the relationship of music and politics in the aftermath of war and dictatorship. Bringing locality into the study of twentieth-century music by focussing on the Italian and Venetian contexts, she shows how music culture was deeply imbedded in the most pressing social and cultural concerns of the post-war period.

    Opera in Postwar Venice