{"title":"‘La donna di poche parole’ from Page to Stage: Envoicing Enchantment in Epic Poetry and Early Opera","authors":"K. Driscoll","doi":"10.1080/02614340.2021.1944482","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT ‘Alle donne si addice il silenzio’: in early modern Italy these words aligned women’s public eloquence with wayward behaviour and their silence with chastity, thus generating significant and widespread debate. This essay traces how such considerations emerged across fiction and history in Ariosto’s and Tasso’s epic poems, and in early operatic representations of their siren-enchantresses: the Orlando furioso’s surprisingly speechless Alcina, and the Gerusalemme liberata’s loquaciously alluring Armida. The salvific qualities of Armida’s speech and song – her ‘vocal expression’, to follow Adriana Cavarero – influenced the development of female personalities on the seventeenth-century operatic stage. The performance practices analysed herein bring together threads of intertextuality and intermedial reception. Such interweaving of materials and modes in the construction of early opera’s musical poetics, which recalls the art of entrelacement, illustrates how poets, librettists, and composers transformed the complex coordination of agency and obstacles into which women – fictional and historical – were often embedded.","PeriodicalId":42720,"journal":{"name":"Italianist","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Italianist","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/02614340.2021.1944482","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT ‘Alle donne si addice il silenzio’: in early modern Italy these words aligned women’s public eloquence with wayward behaviour and their silence with chastity, thus generating significant and widespread debate. This essay traces how such considerations emerged across fiction and history in Ariosto’s and Tasso’s epic poems, and in early operatic representations of their siren-enchantresses: the Orlando furioso’s surprisingly speechless Alcina, and the Gerusalemme liberata’s loquaciously alluring Armida. The salvific qualities of Armida’s speech and song – her ‘vocal expression’, to follow Adriana Cavarero – influenced the development of female personalities on the seventeenth-century operatic stage. The performance practices analysed herein bring together threads of intertextuality and intermedial reception. Such interweaving of materials and modes in the construction of early opera’s musical poetics, which recalls the art of entrelacement, illustrates how poets, librettists, and composers transformed the complex coordination of agency and obstacles into which women – fictional and historical – were often embedded.
“Alle donne si adice il silenzio”:在近代早期的意大利,这句话将女性的公开口才与任性行为联系在一起,将她们的沉默与贞洁联系在一起,从而引发了重大而广泛的争论。这篇文章追溯了这些考虑是如何在小说和历史中出现的,在阿里奥斯托和塔索的史诗中,以及在他们的塞壬女巫的早期歌剧表现中:狂怒的奥兰多出人意料地沉默寡言的阿尔西娜,以及自由的格鲁萨莱姆的饶舌诱人的阿米达。阿米达的演讲和歌曲的救赎特质——她的“声乐表达”,跟随阿德里亚娜·卡瓦雷罗——影响了17世纪歌剧舞台上女性个性的发展。本文分析的表演实践将互文性和中间接受的线索结合在一起。在早期歌剧音乐诗学的构建中,这种材料和模式的交织,让人想起了纠缠的艺术,说明了诗人、自由作家和作曲家如何将女性(虚构的和历史的)经常嵌入的代理和障碍的复杂协调转化为现实。