ABSTRACT

Music, Sexuality and the Enlightenment explains how Mozart's music for Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte 'sounds' the intentions of Da Ponte's characters and their relationships with one another. Mozart, by way of the infinitely generative and beautiful logic of the sonata principle, did not merely interpret Da Ponte's characterizations but lent them temporal, musical forms. Charles Ford's analytic interpretation of these musical forms concerns processes and structures in detail and at medium- to long-term levels. He addresses the music of a wide range of arias and ensembles, and develops original ways to interpret the two largely overlooked operatic genres of secco recitative and finales. Moreover, Ford presents a new method by which to relate musical details directly to philosophical concepts, and thereby, the music of the operas to the inwardly contradictory thinking of the European Enlightenment. This involves close readings of late eighteenth-century understandings of 'man' and nature, self and other, morality and transgression, and gendered identities and sexuality, with particular reference to contemporary writers, especially Goethe, Kant, Laclos, Rousseau, Sade, Schiller, Sterne and Wollstonecraft. The concluding discussion of the implied futures of the operas argues that their divided sexualities, which are those of the Enlightenment as a whole, have come to form our own unquestioned assumptions about gender differences and sexuality. This, along with the elegant and eloquent precision of Mozart's music, is why Figaro, Giovanni and Così still maintain their vital immediacy for audiences today.

part 1|25 pages

Overtures

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|8 pages

Enlightenment as Negative Freedom

chapter 3|10 pages

Enlightened Music

part 2|57 pages

Masculine Music

chapter 4|12 pages

Music of Enlightened Masculinity

chapter 5|8 pages

Angry Masculine Music

chapter 6|10 pages

Libertinage and Musical Libertinage

chapter 8|10 pages

Sensitive Masculine Music

part 3|63 pages

Feminine Music

chapter 9|10 pages

Music of Enlightened Femininity

chapter 10|10 pages

Sorrowful Feminine Music

chapter 11|10 pages

Hysterical Feminine Music

chapter 12|10 pages

Music of Feminine Moral Frailty

chapter 13|8 pages

The Musical Ridicule of Female Intentions

chapter 14|12 pages

Two Maids' and a Peasant Girl's Music

part 4|23 pages

Seductions

chapter 15|10 pages

Simple Musical Seductions

chapter 16|12 pages

Complex Musical Seduction

Fiordiligi and Ferrando

part 5|54 pages

Finales

chapter 17|18 pages

Five Finales

chapter 18|10 pages

Don Giovanni and the Stone Man

chapter 19|6 pages

Kant, Sade and Don Giovanni

chapter 20|14 pages

Così fan tutte, Act II Finale

chapter 21|4 pages

The Futures of the Operas