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2020 - Volume 3 - Number 2


Images of War in Opera

Anastasia Siopsi * siopsi@ionio.gr
Ionian University, Music Department, School of Music and Audio-Visual Arts, Corfu, GREECE

Open Journal for Studies in History, 2020, 3(2), 25-34 * https://doi.org/10.32591/coas.ojsh.0302.01025s
Received: 13 Маy 2020 ▪ Accepted: 9 December 2020 ▪ Published Online: 11 December 2020

LICENCE: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

ARTICLE (Full Text - PDF)


ABSTRACT:
The main aim of this article is to raise questions with wars seen as part of cultural history attempting, thus, to provide a cultural reading. As such, I attempt to show operatic responses to war, to the meaning of violence, and to the ways they illustrate emotions that are at the core of such destructive activities (that is, patriotism, heroism and so forth) and depict wartime ideologies, practices, values and symbols. This paper is a critical and selective overview of images of war in opera mainly up to the twentieth century. There is no aspect in human activities which is not related, more or less, with the issue of war. War has been part of the total human experience. Subsequently, my paper is about the various ways of projecting images of war in opera. In more detail, it is about the ways that opera, since the era of its birth, responds to human conflicts, named wars, and bring on stage an interpretation: an illustration of a hero, a context of values related to the necessity or the avoidance of war, a message to humanity to make us look at our civilization in either positive or negative ways. A cultural contemplation is not about “truths” of the war but raises the question as to how different “truths” inhabit the political and cultural Western European world by means of the total work of art of opera. Opera has had a fundamental role in privileging some ideals of “truths” from others. The main aim is to raise questions with wars seen as part of cultural history attempting, thus, to provide a cultural reading. As such, I attempt to show operatic responses to war, to the meaning of violence, and to the ways they illustrate emotions that are at the core of such destructive activities (that is, patriotism, heroism and so forth) and depict wartime ideologies, practices, values and symbols.

KEY WORDS: оpera, war, culture, heroism, patriotism.

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR:
Anastasia Siopsi, Ionian University, Music Department, School of Music and Audio-Visual Arts, Corfu, GREECE. E-mail: siopsi@ionio.gr.


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