
Singing in Signs: New Semiotic Explorations of Opera offers a bold and refreshing assessment of the state of opera study as seen through the lens of semiotics. At its core, the volume responds to Carolyn Abbate and Roger Parker's Analyzing Opera, utilizing a semiotic framework to embrace opera on its own terms and engage all of its constituent elements in interpretation. Chapters in this collection resurrect the larger sense of serious operatic study as a multi-faceted, interpretive discipline, no longer in isolation. Contributors pay particular attention to the musical, dramatic, cultural, and performative in opera and how these modes can create an intertext that informs interpretation. Combining traditional and emerging methodologies, Singing in Signs engages composer-constructed and work-specific music-semiotic systems, broader socio-cultural music codes, and narrative strategies, with implications for performance and staging practices today.
This volume investigates how semiotic frameworks can revitalize the study of opera by integrating its musical, dramatic, and cultural components into a unified interpretive model. The authors, Gregory J. Decker and Matthew R. Shaftel, curate a collection of essays that respond to previous analytical limitations in the field. By applying semiotic theory, the contributors argue for a multi-faceted approach that treats opera as a complex intertextual system rather than a collection of isolated elements.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and musicologists recognize this text as a significant contribution to the ongoing dialogue regarding operatic analysis and methodology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the specialized nature of the semiotic frameworks employed throughout the chapters.
Page Count:
400
Publication Date:
2020-02-20
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190620625
ISBN-13:
9780190620622
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