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Opera in a New Age: Mass Media, the 'Popular,' and Opera, 1900-1960

机译:新时代的歌剧:大众传媒,“流行”,歌剧,1900-1960

摘要

This dissertation examines the role of opera in the mass media (the press, phonograph, radio, television, and especially movies) from the early to mid-twentieth century. During this time, opera experienced a golden age of popularity as a part of American mass culture. It appeared frequently in the media in ways that would be surprising and unexpected today, and its effects were far reaching and varied. Opera and the mass media worked together in complicated and symbiotic ways, creating and reaching new publics and perpetuating earlier operatic traditions and certain aspects of vernacular culture. Cultural arbiters increasingly signified opera as a part of specifically "high" culture by the late nineteenth century. Opera as set-apart and sacralized "art" continued to function as a pervasive, formative trope in a wide variety of cultural products, even as the genre became increasingly popularized in reality via the media. Different groups of peoples, including diverse producers, performers, and consumers, appropriated and utilized the "highbrow" discourse surrounding opera to their benefit. The ways in which they deployed (or countered) this discourse in the media brought them money, fame, power, and cultural capital, as it also spread opera more broadly throughout American culture.These mass media productions illustrate how opera could be simultaneously elite and popular. Its valence was structured by its medium, venue, format, quality, and inscribed messages. Moviemakers like Cecil B. DeMille and Jesse Lasky, while trying to legitimate their industry, were able to take advantage of this duality by making operatic films that were both "elevated" and popular. Later filmmakers, in movies like A Night at the Opera and The Great Caruso, used opera's high culture connotation merely as a target, while reconfiguring opera as working class. Opera's prestige coupled with its popularity in the media also opened up new opportunities for women performers like Geraldine Farrar and foreign singers like Enrico Caruso, whose opportunities might otherwise be limited. These films, programs, and recordings illustrate how supposedly "elitist" opera could be the purview and possession of Americans from a wide variety of backgrounds, regardless of class, social station, ethnicity, or gender.
机译:本文探讨了歌剧在二十世纪初至二十世纪中叶在大众媒体(新闻界,留声机,广播,电视,尤其是电影)中的作用。在这段时间里,歌剧经历了一个盛行的黄金时代,成为美国大众文化的一部分。它以今天今天令人惊讶和出乎意料的方式频繁出现在媒体上,其影响深远且变化多端。歌剧和大众媒体以复杂且共生的方式合作,创造并吸引了新的公众,并延续了早期的歌剧传统和本土文化的某些方面。到19世纪末,文化仲裁者越来越多地将歌剧视为特别是“高级”文化的一部分。歌剧作为一种保留和神圣的“艺术”,在各种各样的文化产品中继续作为一种普遍的,形成性的论调,尽管这种类型通过媒体在现实中变得越来越普及。不同的人群,包括不同的生产者,表演者和消费者,为了他们的利益而挪用和利用围绕歌剧的“高调”话语。他们在媒体中部署(或反驳)这种话语的方式为他们带来了金钱,名望,权力和文化资本,因为它也在整个美国文化中更广泛地传播了歌剧。这些大众媒体作品说明了歌剧如何同时成为精英和流行。它的价位由其媒介,地点,格式,质量和铭刻的消息构成。塞西尔·B·德米勒(Cecil B. DeMille)和杰西·拉斯基(Jesse Lasky)等电影制片人在试图使自己的电影行业合法化的同时,通过制作既“高贵”又受欢迎的歌剧电影来利用这种双重性。后来,在《歌剧之夜》和《大卡鲁索》等电影中,电影制片人仅以歌剧的高文化内涵为目标,而将歌剧重新配置为工人阶级。 Opera的声望加上其在媒体中的流行度,也为Geraldine Farrar等女艺人和Enrico Caruso等外国歌手提供了新的机会,否则这些机会可能会受到限制。这些电影,节目和录音说明了所谓的“精英”歌剧如何可能成为具有各种背景的美国人的权限和财产,而不论其阶级,社会地位,种族或性别如何。

著录项

  • 作者

    Mitchell Rebecca M.;

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  • 年度 2014
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