The Locator -- [(title = "Hector Berlioz")]

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Title:
Nineteenth-century opera and the scientific imagination / edited by David Trippett, Benjamin Walton.
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press,
Copyright Date:
2019
Description:
xv, 381 pages : illustrations (black and white), music ; 26 cm
Subject:
Opera--19th century.
Music and science--History--19th century.
Music and science.
Opera.
Oper
Wissenschaft
Wissenschaft--Motiv
1800-1899
History.
Other Authors:
Trippett, David, 1980- editor.
Walton, Benjamin, 1972- editor.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 335-374) and index.
Contents:
Part IV. Unsound seeds / Alexander Rehding. Part I. Voices. Pneumotypes : Jean de Reszke's high pianissimos and the occult sciences of breathing / James Q. Davies ; Vocal culture in the age of laryngoscopy / Benjamin Steege ; Operatic fantasies in early nineteenth-century psychiatry / Carmel Raz ; Opera and hypnosis : Victor Maurel's experiments with Verdi's Otello / Celine Frigau Manning -- Part II. Ears. Hearing in the music of Hector Berlioz / Julia Kursell ; From distant sounds to Aeolian ears : Ernst Kapp's auditory prosthesis / David Trippett ; Wagner, hearing loss and the urban soundscape of nineteenth-century Germany / James Deaville -- Part III. Technologies. Science, technology and love in late eighteenth-century opera / Deirdre Loughridge ; Technological phantoms of the Opera / Benjamin Walton ; Circuit listening / Ellen Lockhart -- Part IV. Bodies. Excelsior as mass ornament : the reproduction of gesture / Gavin Williams ; Automata, physiology and opera in the nineteenth century / Myles W. Jackson ; Wagnerian manipulation : Bayreuth and nineteenth-century sciences of the mind / James Kennaway ; Unsound seeds / Alexander Rehding.
Summary:
Scientific thinking has long been linked to music theory and instrument making, yet the profound and often surprising intersections between the sciences and opera during the long nineteenth century are here explored for the first time. These touch on a wide variety of topics, including vocal physiology, theories of listening and sensory communication, technologies of theatrical machinery and discourses of biological degeneration. Taken together, the chapters reveal an intertwined cultural history that extends from backstage hydraulics to drawing-room hypnotism, and from laryngoscopy to theatrical aeronautics. Situated at the intersection of opera studies and the history of science, the book therefore offers a novel and illuminating set of case studies, of a kind that will appeal to historians of both science and opera, and of European culture more generally from the French Revolution to the end of the Victorian period.--Book jacket.
ISBN:
1107111250
9781107111257
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1085965088
LCCN:
2019007845
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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