La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne

Although modern operatic scholarship has spent considerable time studying the erotic power of nineteenth-century crossdressing, English baroque opera seems to have been slightly overlooked in that respect. As far as Handel’s production is concerned, one still reads here and there that male parts req...

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Main Author: Pierre Degott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut du Monde Anglophone 2019-02-01
Series:Etudes Epistémè
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/3465
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spelling doaj-231a37246955427284c69d54771d5bf72020-11-25T02:15:01ZengInstitut du Monde AnglophoneEtudes Epistémè1634-04502019-02-013410.4000/episteme.3465La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendéliennePierre DegottAlthough modern operatic scholarship has spent considerable time studying the erotic power of nineteenth-century crossdressing, English baroque opera seems to have been slightly overlooked in that respect. As far as Handel’s production is concerned, one still reads here and there that male parts requiring an alto voice were indifferently given to both male and female singers, the subtext generally being that such roles were sung by a woman when no castrato was available. Would that mean that the contralto specialized in male parts was hardly more than a spare castrato? This paper aims at rehabilitating the female opera singer specialized in male parts (Jane Barbier, Francesca Bertolli, Caterina Galli, Antonia Merighi, Maria Caterina Negri, Diana Vico…), who already then was the victim of various condescending prejudices from certain male quarters (Charles Burney, Charles Jennens, Owen Swiney…). It ponders the issue of vocal and physical typologies for such parts, just as it examines the specificities of male roles specifically designed for women. It eventually considers the shift from opera to oratorio, with a view to assessing to what extent the change in genre also affected new perceptions of gender.http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/3465Handeloperaoratoriocastratocontraltogenre
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pierre Degott
spellingShingle Pierre Degott
La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
Etudes Epistémè
Handel
opera
oratorio
castrato
contralto
genre
author_facet Pierre Degott
author_sort Pierre Degott
title La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
title_short La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
title_full La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
title_fullStr La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
title_full_unstemmed La construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
title_sort la construction du genre : contraltos et castrats dans la production lyrique haendélienne
publisher Institut du Monde Anglophone
series Etudes Epistémè
issn 1634-0450
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Although modern operatic scholarship has spent considerable time studying the erotic power of nineteenth-century crossdressing, English baroque opera seems to have been slightly overlooked in that respect. As far as Handel’s production is concerned, one still reads here and there that male parts requiring an alto voice were indifferently given to both male and female singers, the subtext generally being that such roles were sung by a woman when no castrato was available. Would that mean that the contralto specialized in male parts was hardly more than a spare castrato? This paper aims at rehabilitating the female opera singer specialized in male parts (Jane Barbier, Francesca Bertolli, Caterina Galli, Antonia Merighi, Maria Caterina Negri, Diana Vico…), who already then was the victim of various condescending prejudices from certain male quarters (Charles Burney, Charles Jennens, Owen Swiney…). It ponders the issue of vocal and physical typologies for such parts, just as it examines the specificities of male roles specifically designed for women. It eventually considers the shift from opera to oratorio, with a view to assessing to what extent the change in genre also affected new perceptions of gender.
topic Handel
opera
oratorio
castrato
contralto
genre
url http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/3465
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