Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Irving Lowens Book Award, 2020
Judy Tsou Critical Race Studies Award, 2020

"A necessary exploration of how race has shaped the opera landscape in the United States and South Africa."--New York Times
"This book reveals and examines the entire hidden history of race in opera and presents us with a vision of the art form as an inherently powerful and liberating cultural force. This is a power punch of a book and not to be missed." --Book Riot
"This wide-ranging and-a positive sense-provocative study . . . should interest anyone concerned with teaching and studying the shifting functions of opera in an even more shifting world."--Opera News
"Nestled within the disciplines of musicology, ethnomusicology, African Studies, and cultural theory, this truly interdisciplinary monograph points to a new way to analyze music's place in the past and the present."--New Books Network
"Andre explores the background, identity and intention of the composer and librettist, and the genre, in a way that is illuminating and paints a vivid picture for the reader. . . .Overall, this book does contribute greatly to the literature in the field and is relevant to musicologists, sociologists of music and culture, as well as practitioners in the field of opera." --Ethnic and Racial Studies
"A most welcome, insightful, deeply rooted and felt study, admirably researched and written. It is rich with ideas about how opera is presented and received, and with astute reflections on the troubling ways that race, racism, segregation, colonization, gender, sexuality, and sexism play into decisions about what operas are performed, how they are performed, and how they are heard and seen."--Ellie M. Hisama, author of Gendering Musical Modernism: The Music of Ruth Crawford, Marion Bauer, and Miriam Gideon
"A compelling companion to Rosalyn Story's important text And So I Sing. Where Story focused on constructing the general historiography, Black Opera expands this to a more analytical discussion of how black women have been represented socially, visually, and aesthetically through certain operatic roles. This perspective is unique, innovative, and fills a void in the scholarship on opera."--Tammy Kernodle, author of Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams

Black Opera History Power Engagement

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    A Hardback by Naomi André

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      Publisher: MO - University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 5/4/2018 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780252041921, 978-0252041921
      ISBN10: 0252041925

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Irving Lowens Book Award, 2020
      Judy Tsou Critical Race Studies Award, 2020

      "A necessary exploration of how race has shaped the opera landscape in the United States and South Africa."--New York Times
      "This book reveals and examines the entire hidden history of race in opera and presents us with a vision of the art form as an inherently powerful and liberating cultural force. This is a power punch of a book and not to be missed." --Book Riot
      "This wide-ranging and-a positive sense-provocative study . . . should interest anyone concerned with teaching and studying the shifting functions of opera in an even more shifting world."--Opera News
      "Nestled within the disciplines of musicology, ethnomusicology, African Studies, and cultural theory, this truly interdisciplinary monograph points to a new way to analyze music's place in the past and the present."--New Books Network
      "Andre explores the background, identity and intention of the composer and librettist, and the genre, in a way that is illuminating and paints a vivid picture for the reader. . . .Overall, this book does contribute greatly to the literature in the field and is relevant to musicologists, sociologists of music and culture, as well as practitioners in the field of opera." --Ethnic and Racial Studies
      "A most welcome, insightful, deeply rooted and felt study, admirably researched and written. It is rich with ideas about how opera is presented and received, and with astute reflections on the troubling ways that race, racism, segregation, colonization, gender, sexuality, and sexism play into decisions about what operas are performed, how they are performed, and how they are heard and seen."--Ellie M. Hisama, author of Gendering Musical Modernism: The Music of Ruth Crawford, Marion Bauer, and Miriam Gideon
      "A compelling companion to Rosalyn Story's important text And So I Sing. Where Story focused on constructing the general historiography, Black Opera expands this to a more analytical discussion of how black women have been represented socially, visually, and aesthetically through certain operatic roles. This perspective is unique, innovative, and fills a void in the scholarship on opera."--Tammy Kernodle, author of Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams

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