****Forwarded message from Alexandra Wilson <[log in to unmask]
>****
Beyond black tie and bubbly: rescuing opera from stereotypes
A one-day conference organised by the Oxford Brookes University opera
research unit (OBERTO), to be held on Tuesday 9 September 2014.
Discourse surrounding opera today is concerned with its apparently
difficult position within society: journalists, the elusive ‘Mr Taxpayer’
and even some performers are fond of presenting it as an ‘elitist’ pursuit
for the snooty rich, who dress up to enjoy fat ladies singing loudly in
opulent surroundings. Alternatively the cliché of the ‘opera buff’ is
invoked, who flaunts a vocal score in the gallery and converses
knowledgeably about performers and leitmotifs, in order to depict opera as
a genre that excludes or positively repels the uninitiated.
While such stereotypes are arguably not new, the public image of opera as a
publicly funded, but supposedly socially exclusive and intellectually
demanding art form is more visible than ever. The media, in an online
economy, are hungry for hits and comments and happily fan the flames of
controversy; and the accessibility agenda in the arts creates an
environment where, in the UK in particular, opera companies have to
demonstrate their openness and their efforts to reach out to new audiences
of ‘ordinary people’. Concerns about the squandering of public funds are
never far from the surface of the debate. Britain, it would seem, has a
particular opera ‘problem’, but it is one that has long and complex
historical roots.
This conference aims to unpick and examine critically the idea of opera as
a socially exclusive and intellectually forbidding genre. We aim to
consider ways in which opera might be presented in more interesting ways to
contemporary audiences and hope to bring together scholars, singers,
directors, opera house personnel, journalists and opera goers in fruitful
debate. We therefore invite papers addressing as wide a variety of topics
and methodologies as possible, including (but by no means limited to):
• The historical roots of operatic ‘elitism’: where, when, why and how did
the concept of elite achievement become so freighted with negative
connotations in an operatic context?
• Attitudes to opera in continental Europe: performing opera without
apologies
• Accessibility and outreach: damned if you do, and damned if you don’t?
• Not for ‘the likes of us’? Reassessing opera’s audiences
• Opera journalism, social media and PR
• The X-Factor factor: ‘authentic’ amateurism vs. professionalism
• Crossover: hindrance or help?
• Do attempts to address so-called ‘elitism’ serve only to perpetuate the
idea?
We envisage that the conference will comprise a mixture of individual
papers, panel discussions and open discussion. ‘Alternative format’
contributions are also welcomed.
Proposals of up to 250 words for individual papers of 20 minutes duration
should be submitted by e-mail to Dr Alexandra Wilson (
[log in to unmask]) no later than Friday 9th May.
Champagne will not be served.
Conference organisers: Dr Alexandra Wilson, Dr Barbara Eichner and Dr Hugo
Shirley
OBERTO: Oxford Brookes – Exploring Research Trends in Opera
http://obertobrookes.com/conference-2014/
****End of forwarded message****
--
Now Available: *The Quilting Points of Musical Modernism*, by J. P. E.
Harper-Scott
For more information see www.cambridge.org/9780521765213
Dr J. P. E. Harper-Scott | Reader in Musicology and Theory (= Associate
Professor)
Department of Music, Royal Holloway, University of London
Website: http://www.jpehs.co.uk/
Blog: http://www.jpehs.co.uk/blog
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