The often-vexed societal reception of modernism and opera is foreboding testimony to the necessity for this book, which is the first collection of its kind... Essential. Choice
Richard Begam is a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is the author of Samuel Beckett and the End of Modernity and the coeditor of Modernism and Colonialism: British and Irish Literature, 1899-1939. Matthew Wilson Smith is an associate professor of German studies and theater and performance studies at Stanford University. He is the author of The Total Work of Art: From Bayreuth to Cyberspace and the editor of Georg Buchner: The Major Works.
Acknowledgments Richard Begam and Matthew Wilson SmithIntroduction Part OneWorld War I and Before: Crises of Gender and Theatricality 1. Matthew Wilson Smith"Laughing at the Redeemer: Kundry and the Paradox of Parsifal" 2. Daniel Albright "Materlinck, Debussy and Modernism" 3. Klara Moricz "Echoes of the Self: Cosmic Loneliness in Bartok's Duke Bluebeard's Castle" Part TwoInterwar Modernism: Movement and Countermovement 4. Bryan Gilliam"The Great War and Its Aftermath: Straussand Hofmannthal's 'Third-Way Modernism'" 5. Bernadette Meyler "Adorno's Shifting Wozzeck" 6. Derek Katz"Many Modernisms, Two Makropulos Cases:Capek, Janacek and the Shifting Avant-Gardes of Inter-war Prague" 7. Richard Begam"Schoenberg, Modernism and Degeneracy" 8. Cyrena Pondrom"Gertrude Stein, Minimalism and Modern Opera" Part ThreeOpera after World War II: Tensions of Institutional Modernism 9. Herbert S. Lindenberger, "Stravinsky, Auden and the Mid-Century Modernism of The Rake's Progress" 10. Irene Morra " Gloriana and the New Elizabethan Age" 11. Linda and Michael Hutcheon"One Saint in Eight Tableaux: The Untimely Modernism of Olivier Messiaen's Saint Francois d'Assise" 12. Joy H. Calico" Saariaho's L'amour de loin: Modernist Opera in the Twenty-First Century" Notes on ContributorsIndex