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Just as America was observed in French literary and political
commentary, we find representations of America in French music,
dance, and theatre which serve as the focus of this volume.
Following the American Revolution, French authors often viewed the
United States as a laboratory for the forging of new practices of
liberte and egalite, in affinity with France's own Revolutionary
ideals but in competition with lingering anti-American depictions
of an inferior, untamed New World. The volume examines French
imagining of America through musical/theatrical portrayals of the
American Revolution and Republic, soundscapes of the Statue of
Liberty, homages to Washington, Franklin and Lafayette and
negotiations of Francophone identity in New Orleans. The subject of
race features prominently in paradoxical depictions of slavery,
freedom, and revolution in the United States and French Caribbean
colonies of 'Amerique' and in varied interpretations of American
music and gendered identity. Essays consider French constructions
of the Indigenous American and Black American 'exotic' that
intersect with tropes of noble, pastoral savagery, menacing
barbarism and the 'civilising' potency of French culture. Such
French constructions reveal both a revulsion of racial alterity and
an attraction to the expressive, even subversive, freedom of
Americanness. Investigations of French conceptions of America
extend to critiques of American orchestral music, Gottschalk's
Louisianan-Caribbean Creole works, Buffalo Bill's spectacles and
the cakewalk in Paris. With scholarly contributions on music,
dance, theatre and opera, the volume will be essential reading for
students and scholars of these disciplines.
This comprehensive critical study of the nineteenth-century French
grand opera La Juive (Paris Opera, 1835) is a powerful and
successful work by the leading dramatist and librettist Eugene
Scribe, and Conservatoire-trained composer, Fromental Halevy.
Hallman explores the politically charged messages of the opera
within the context of French social and cultural history. The book
addresses the opera's portrayal of religious intolerance and
Jewish-Christian conflict in subject, setting and characterization,
viewing the anticlerical thrust of its critique as a reminder of
the historical abuses of an autocratic Church and State and as
reflection of the era's liberal ideology. It also considers the
portrayal of the central Jewish characters in light of literary
stereotypes and contradictory, antisemitic attitudes toward Jews in
French society.
This is the first critical study of the nineteenth-century French grand opera La Juive (Paris Opera, 1835) a powerful and successful work by the leading dramatist and librettist, Eugene Scribe, and conservatoire-trained composer, Fromental Halévy. Hallman explores the politically charged messages of the opera within the context of French social and cultural history. The book addresses the opera's portrayal of religious intolerance, Jewish-Christian conflict, and also considers the portrayal of the central Jewish characters in light of literary stereotypes and contradictory, antisemitic attitudes toward Jews in French society.
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