
Opera In The Tropics Is An Engaging Exploration Of Theater With Music In Brazil From The Mid 1500s To The Early 1820s. Author Rogério Budasz Delves Into The Practices Of The Actors, Singers, Poets, And Composers Who Created And Performed Jesuit Moral Plays, Spanish Comedias, And Portuguese Vernacular Operas And Entremezes During The Colonial Period, As Well As The Italian Operas That Celebrated The New Independent Nation In 1822. A Brazilian Producer Claimed In 1825 That The Goal Of Music-theater Was To Instruct, Entertain, And Distract The Population. Budasz Argues That This Threefold Goal Had In Fact Been Present Throughout The Colonial Period, In Different Combinations And With Different Purposes, At The Hands Of Missionaries, Intellectuals, Bureaucrats, Political Leaders, And Cultural Producers. While Budasz Demonstrates A Continuity From Portuguese Theatrical Practices, Primarily Through The Circulation Of Artists And Repertory, He Also Examines A Number Of Localized Departures From The Metropolitan Model, Particularly In The Ethnic And Gender Profile Of Theatrical Workers, In The Modifications Determined By Local Tastes, Priorities, And Materials, And In The Political Use Of Theater As An Ideological And Civilizing Tool Within The Paradoxical Context Of A Slave Society. An Eye-opening Narrative Of The Transformations And Uses Of A Colonial Art Form, Opera In The Tropics Will Be Essential Reading For All Interested In The Music And Theater In Iberian And Latin American Culture.
How did music-theater function as a tool for instruction, entertainment, and distraction within the complex social hierarchy of colonial Brazil? Rogério Budasz, a specialist in Luso-Brazilian music history, examines the evolution of theatrical performance from the mid-1500s to the early 1820s. By analyzing the roles of missionaries, intellectuals, and political figures, he argues that music-theater served as a consistent ideological instrument. The text synthesizes archival research to demonstrate how European theatrical models were adapted to the specific political and social constraints of a slave-holding colonial society.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Iberian and Latin American cultural history. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the clarity with which the author connects theatrical practice to the broader political landscape of the colonial era.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190215844
ISBN-13:
9780190215842
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