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Introduction: Flirting on the lyric stage

Introduction: Flirting on the lyric stage
Introduction: Flirting on the lyric stage
The lyric stage is a cultural site at which constructions of gender have been developed, mitigated and, at times, hindered by musical performance. From the castrati of the seventeenth century to Mozart and Massenet’s cross-dressed Cherubinos, musical works created for lyric stages have often complicated traditional and normative readings of the gender and sexual identities of their characters, allowing composers, performers, and audiences to move beyond simple biological understandings of gender and sex. The erotically charged sights and sounds of such productions called into question accepted generic conventions, thus revealing the very instability of normative identity and musical convention that European societies presumed integral to their social codes and generic constructs. The fourteen case studies in this volume explore these topics through various geographical, historical, and musical perspectives: from Italian opera seria to Parisian music-hall ballet and Greek operetta during the interwar years, these essays shed new light on the complex and complementary ways in which gender and the production of gendered identities were invariably contingent upon — but nevertheless moved beyond — the expectations of genre on the lyric stage.
2295-5607
ix-xxi
Brepols
Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0
Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0

Everist, Mark (2025) Introduction: Flirting on the lyric stage. In Genre and the Production of Gendered Identity on the Lyric Stage. vol. 55, Brepols. ix-xxi .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

The lyric stage is a cultural site at which constructions of gender have been developed, mitigated and, at times, hindered by musical performance. From the castrati of the seventeenth century to Mozart and Massenet’s cross-dressed Cherubinos, musical works created for lyric stages have often complicated traditional and normative readings of the gender and sexual identities of their characters, allowing composers, performers, and audiences to move beyond simple biological understandings of gender and sex. The erotically charged sights and sounds of such productions called into question accepted generic conventions, thus revealing the very instability of normative identity and musical convention that European societies presumed integral to their social codes and generic constructs. The fourteen case studies in this volume explore these topics through various geographical, historical, and musical perspectives: from Italian opera seria to Parisian music-hall ballet and Greek operetta during the interwar years, these essays shed new light on the complex and complementary ways in which gender and the production of gendered identities were invariably contingent upon — but nevertheless moved beyond — the expectations of genre on the lyric stage.

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Published date: 1 May 2025

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Local EPrints ID: 503967
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503967
ISSN: 2295-5607
PURE UUID: ef0b2943-b37c-4699-be5e-1fc258dce971

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Date deposited: 19 Aug 2025 17:02
Last modified: 19 Aug 2025 17:02

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