
After Their Military Defeat By The Florentines In The Mid-sixteenth Century, The Citizens Of Siena Turned From Politics To Celebratory, Social Occasions To Express Their Civic Identity And Show Their Capacity For Collective Action. In The First Major Work Of Its Kind, Colleen Reardon Opens A Window On The Ways In Which The Sienese Absorbed The New Genre Of Opera Into Their Own Festive Apparatus And Challenges The Prevailing View That Operatic Productions In The City Were Merely An Extension Of Medici Power To The Provinces. It Was, Rather, Members Of The Expatriate Chigi Family Who Exploited The Festive Impulse Of Their Countrymen, Coordinating Operatic Performances With Their Triumphant Visits Home By Activating Ties Of Friendship And Family As Well As Connections To Sienese Institutions, Most Notably The Assicurate, Possibly The First All-female Academy In Italy. If The Chigi Proved Successful At Inserting Opera Into Larger Patterns Of Sociability That Conveyed The Very Essence Of What It Meant To Be Sienese (senesità), Their Successor, The Flamboyant Playwright And Librettist Girolamo Gigli, Struggled In His Attempts To Transform Operatic Performances Into Professional Enterprises. Fluidly Written And Richly Embellished With Anecdotes From Historical Chronicles, A Sociable Moment Offers Insight Into The Sienese Experience With Opera During The Genre's Rapid Expansion Throughout The Italian Peninsula During The Late Seventeenth And Early Eighteenth Centuries.
This work investigates how the citizens of seventeenth and eighteenth-century Siena utilized operatic performances as a vehicle for expressing civic identity and social cohesion following their political subjugation. Colleen Reardon, a scholar of music history, synthesizes archival research and historical chronicles to challenge the traditional narrative that Sienese opera was merely a tool of Medici political hegemony. She argues instead that local institutions and influential families, particularly the Chigi, integrated opera into existing patterns of sociability to reinforce a distinct sense of Sienese identity known as senesità.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of regional Italian musical culture and the social functions of early opera. Readers frequently note the author's ability to balance academic rigor with accessible prose, making it a valuable resource for those interested in the intersection of music, politics, and social history.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190496312
ISBN-13:
9780190496319
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