Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth

This article proposes a ritualistic approach to opera in the historical case of the mid-eighteenth-century Margravial Opera House in Bavarian Bayreuth to argue that court opera can be understood as a variety of social showcase. In this view, court opera is a specific form of communication through w...

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Main Author: Vlado Kotnik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade 2016-04-01
Series:Etnoantropološki Problemi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eap-iea.org/novi-ojs/index.php/eap/article/view/627
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spelling doaj-29cc05f644d04c8287c2ec85cf32e6332020-11-24T22:45:22ZengUniversity of BelgradeEtnoantropološki Problemi 0353-15892334-88012016-04-0111110.21301/EAP.V11I1.1618Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century BayreuthVlado Kotnik0Faculty of Humanities University of Primorska Koper This article proposes a ritualistic approach to opera in the historical case of the mid-eighteenth-century Margravial Opera House in Bavarian Bayreuth to argue that court opera can be understood as a variety of social showcase. In this view, court opera is a specific form of communication through which opera established the various types of relationship between itself and the social worlds in which, and for which, it was created. By referring to the operatic rituals under the leadership and sponsorship of Wilhelmina of Bayreuth and her husband Frederick, it will be established how the Bayreuth’s ruling couple used opera for several social and political purposes. As both genre and institution, the margravial opera production is interpreted by the analytical models of anthropologists of ritual and theatre, like Victor Turner, Clifford Geertz, Maurice Bloch, Stanley Tambiah, Catherine Bell, employing their ritual theory, especially Turner’s concept of a “hall of magic mirrors”. https://eap-iea.org/novi-ojs/index.php/eap/article/view/627operaritualBayreuthMarkgräfliches OpernhausWilhemina of Bayreuth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vlado Kotnik
spellingShingle Vlado Kotnik
Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
Etnoantropološki Problemi
opera
ritual
Bayreuth
Markgräfliches Opernhaus
Wilhemina of Bayreuth
author_facet Vlado Kotnik
author_sort Vlado Kotnik
title Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
title_short Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
title_full Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
title_fullStr Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
title_full_unstemmed Opera as Social Showcase: Rituals of “Magic Mirrors” at the Margravial Opera House in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Bayreuth
title_sort opera as social showcase: rituals of “magic mirrors” at the margravial opera house in mid-eighteenth-century bayreuth
publisher University of Belgrade
series Etnoantropološki Problemi
issn 0353-1589
2334-8801
publishDate 2016-04-01
description This article proposes a ritualistic approach to opera in the historical case of the mid-eighteenth-century Margravial Opera House in Bavarian Bayreuth to argue that court opera can be understood as a variety of social showcase. In this view, court opera is a specific form of communication through which opera established the various types of relationship between itself and the social worlds in which, and for which, it was created. By referring to the operatic rituals under the leadership and sponsorship of Wilhelmina of Bayreuth and her husband Frederick, it will be established how the Bayreuth’s ruling couple used opera for several social and political purposes. As both genre and institution, the margravial opera production is interpreted by the analytical models of anthropologists of ritual and theatre, like Victor Turner, Clifford Geertz, Maurice Bloch, Stanley Tambiah, Catherine Bell, employing their ritual theory, especially Turner’s concept of a “hall of magic mirrors”.
topic opera
ritual
Bayreuth
Markgräfliches Opernhaus
Wilhemina of Bayreuth
url https://eap-iea.org/novi-ojs/index.php/eap/article/view/627
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