Anna Fishzon.
Fandom, Authenticity, and Opera: Mad Acts and Letter Scenes in Fin- de-Siècle Russia.
New York: Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2013.
ISBN-10: 1137023449, ISBN-13: 978-1137023445 Palgrave Studies in Cultural and Intellectual History
http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=575944
In Russia at the turn of the twentieth century, printed literature and performances--from celebrity narratives and opera fandom to revolutionary acts and political speeches--frequently articulated extreme emotional states and passionate belief. A uniquely intense approach to public life and private expression--the “melodramatic imagination”--is at the center of this study. Previously, scholars have only indirectly addressed the everyday appropriation of melodramatic aesthetics in Russia, choosing to concentrate on canonical texts and producers of mass culture. Collective fantasies and affects are daunting objects of study, difficult to render and almost impossible to prove empirically. Music and art historians, with some notable exceptions, have been reluctant to discuss reception for similar reasons. By analyzing the artifacts and practices of a commercialized opera culture, author Anna Fishzon provides a solution to these challenges. Her focus on celebrity and fandom as features of the melodramatic imagination helps illuminate Russian modernity and provides the groundwork for comparative studies of fin-de-siècle European popular and high culture, selfhood, authenticity, and political theater.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
1. Entrepreneurs and the Public Mission of the Russian Private Opera 19
2. Russia’s New Celebrities: Offstage Narrative and Performance 47
3. Deviant Audiences and the Feminization of Fandom 79
4. Authenticity in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, or, How the Gramophone Made Everyday Life Operatic 113
5. Fan Letters, Melodrama, and the Meaning of Love 149
6. Epilogue 185
Notes 201
Bibliography 241
Index 261
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