
Giacomo Puccini's La Bohème Is One Of The Most Frequently Performed Operas In The World. But How Did It Come To Be So Adored? In This Book, Author Alexandra Wilson Traces La Bohème's Rise To Fame And Demonstrates That Its Success Grew Steadily Through Stage Performances, Recordings, Filmed Versions And The Endorsements Of Star Singers. More Recently, Popular Songs, Film Soundtracks And Musicals That Draw On The Opera's Music And Themes Added Further To Its Immense Cultural Impact. This Cultural History Offers A Fresh Reading Of A Familiar Work. Wilson Argues That La Bohème's Approach To Realism And Its Flouting Of Conventions Of The Italian Operatic Tradition Made It Strikingly Modern For The 1890s. She Explores How Puccini And His Librettists Engaged With Gender, Urban Poverty And Nostalgia--themes That Grew Out Of The Work's Own Time And Continue To Resonate With Audiences More Than 120 Years Later. Her Analysis Of The Opera's Depiction Of Paris Reveals That La Bohème Was Not Only Influenced By The Romantic Mythologies Surrounding The City To This Day But Also Helped Shape Them. Wilson's Consideration Of How Directors Have Reinvented This Opera For A New Age Completes This Fascinating History Of La Bohème, Making It Essential Reading For Anyone Interested In This Opera And The Works It Inspired.
This book investigates how Giacomo Puccini's La Bohème evolved from an 1890s operatic production into a globally recognized cultural phenomenon. Alexandra Wilson, a scholar of music and cultural history, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach to examine the opera's trajectory. She argues that the work's departure from traditional Italian operatic conventions, combined with its engagement with themes of urban poverty and gender, established a modern framework that continues to influence contemporary media and public perception of Paris.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and music historians recognize this work as a thorough examination of the intersection between operatic tradition and modern cultural consumption. Readers frequently note the clarity of Wilson's prose, which makes complex musicological and historical arguments accessible to both students and opera enthusiasts.
Page Count:
128
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190637900
ISBN-13:
9780190637903
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