ABSTRACT

Performing Arts in Changing Societies is a detailed exploration of genre development within the fields of dance, theatre, and opera in selected European countries during the decades before and after 1800. An introductory chapter outlines the theoretical and ideological background of genre thinking in Europe, starting from antiquity. A further fourteen chapters cover the performing genres as they developed in England, France, Germany, and Austria, and follow the dissemination and adaptation of the corresponding genres in minor and major cities in the Nordic countries. With a strong emphasis on the role that pragmatic and contextual factors had in defining genres, the book examines such subjects as the dancing masters in Christiania (Oslo), circa 1800, the repertory and travels of an itinerant acrobat and his wife in Norway in the 1760s, and the influence of Enlightenment ideas on bourgeois drama in Denmark.

Including detailed analyses in the light of material, political, and social factors, this is a valuable resource for scholars and researchers in the fields of musicology, opera studies, and theatre and performance studies.

chapter 1|21 pages

Performative arts between rules and realities

The adaptive history of genre

chapter 2|16 pages

Opera at home

Performance and ownership in eighteenth-century France

chapter 3|15 pages

Nationalism in eighteenth-century German opera?

Changing views on the nation in two operas by Johann Friedrich Reichardt

chapter 4|16 pages

Marvellous changes – changes within the marvellous

Carl Maria von Weber’s Oberon as transfer between cultural tendencies and historical discourses

chapter 5|15 pages

Syngespill

A favourite or a substitute?

chapter 6|12 pages

‘Ce mot de Wahrheit, quelle expression elle lui donna’

The melodrama, its performances, and performers in late eighteenth-century Vienna

chapter 7|18 pages

Amphions of the North

Court Kapellmeister in the musical life of Sweden around 1800

chapter 8|14 pages

Representative performances, political propaganda, and the question of financing

The Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm 1773–1823

chapter 9|17 pages

What place for a woman?

Dancing in London’s theatres circa 1770–1810

chapter 11|15 pages

‘Nemo ei in orbe terrarum in artibus par est’

The rope and wire repertory of itinerant artist Michael Stuart

chapter 12|13 pages

Pantomime under the Aurora Borealis

The Winter season of the Gautier troupe in Trondheim, Norway, 1839–1840

chapter 13|13 pages

‘Not for pleasure alone’

The dramatic societies and the theatre craze, 1770–1850: Their background in the Age of Enlightenment and their importance for the emergence of private theatres in Denmark

chapter 14|15 pages

On the wire

Scenographing affect at Sillgateteatern in Gothenburg around 1800