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Opera and the Culture of Fascism

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Opera and the Culture of Fascism Synopsis

This study looks at nineteenth - and early twentieth-century opera as part of a culture which produced fascism as a crisis-state, and threatened to extinguish the genre as an influential and contemporary high form of art altogether. Jeremy Tambling highlights the themes of the cultural crisis through a detailed discussion of some dozen operas and a general overview of the works of Wagner, Verdi, Puccini, Strauss, and others, drawing on the writings of Nietzsche, Adorno, Benjamin, and Heidegger, for an understanding of the ideological background. Reading fascism as a political, intellectual, and psychological phenomenon, the author draws on the works of Bataille, Theweleit, and Kristeva, for discussion of proto-fascist and fascist thought, and for its relation to gender-politics. Resisting the clichés about Wagner or Strauss's relationship to the Third Reich, Tambling takes the opera out the hermetically sealed-off state in which it is normally discussed, and presents it as both complicit in, and in opposition to, the reactionary and regressive pressures that made up the `culture of fascism', and those that tried to make opera part of the `fascism of culture'.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780198165668
Publication date: 3rd October 1996
Author: Jeremy (Reader, Department of Comparative Literature, Reader, Department of Comparative Literature, University of Hon Tambling
Publisher: Clarendon Press an imprint of Oxford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 284 pages
Genres: Opera
Cultural studies
Far-right political ideologies and movements