The history of English opera has always been conditioned by the ambivalent attitude of English-speaking audiences towards their own language. A close scrutiny of the London theatre seasons of the XVIIIth and XIXth centuries does indeed show a strong split, in terms of aesthetic and sociological considerations, between, on the one hand, the aristocratic Italian seasons of the King’s Theatre in Covent Garden, and the English opera seasons organised by the "lesser" theatres on the other. The aim of this paper is to assess the sociological implications of the use of the English language on the operatic stage. Far from defending the – now absurd – idea of the superiority of English over original versions, this paper shows that English versions o...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
An interesting comparison from 1783 concerning the different means of expression in spoken theatre ...
The history of English opera has always been conditioned by the ambivalent attitude of English-speak...
This article raises the issue of translation in the construction of a national operatic repertoire. ...
This article raises the issue of translation in the construction of a national operatic repertoire. ...
With the post-war revival of ancient music, the 1950s and 1960s were also the period when th...
With the post-war revival of ancient music, the 1950s and 1960s were also the period when th...
This dissertation examines music and text circulation in cosmopolitan Europe during the last decades...
The question of the expediency of using the original language in opera as the only correct version o...
This dissertation examines music and text circulation in cosmopolitan Europe during the last decades...
The article examines the language used in some Italian opera librettos in XVII- XVIII centuries. The...
Sole British contribution to international peer-reviewed volume originating from the interdisciplina...
This thesis examines the circulation and reception of Italian operas in German translation in the la...
This thesis examines the circulation and reception of Italian operas in German translation in the la...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
An interesting comparison from 1783 concerning the different means of expression in spoken theatre ...
The history of English opera has always been conditioned by the ambivalent attitude of English-speak...
This article raises the issue of translation in the construction of a national operatic repertoire. ...
This article raises the issue of translation in the construction of a national operatic repertoire. ...
With the post-war revival of ancient music, the 1950s and 1960s were also the period when th...
With the post-war revival of ancient music, the 1950s and 1960s were also the period when th...
This dissertation examines music and text circulation in cosmopolitan Europe during the last decades...
The question of the expediency of using the original language in opera as the only correct version o...
This dissertation examines music and text circulation in cosmopolitan Europe during the last decades...
The article examines the language used in some Italian opera librettos in XVII- XVIII centuries. The...
Sole British contribution to international peer-reviewed volume originating from the interdisciplina...
This thesis examines the circulation and reception of Italian operas in German translation in the la...
This thesis examines the circulation and reception of Italian operas in German translation in the la...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
The aim of this work is to integrate a more traditional description of what opera surtitling is – a ...
An interesting comparison from 1783 concerning the different means of expression in spoken theatre ...