Authorial Voice and Agency in the Operas of Richard Strauss
Auteur : Douglas Easterling
Date de publication : 2014
Éditeur : University of Cincinnati
Nombre de pages : 114
Résumé du livre
Self-referentiality plays an important, but often overlooked, role in the works of Richard Strauss. The broad category of self-reference includes works of metafiction, which literary critic Patricia Waugh has defined as fiction that "self-consciously and systematically draws attention to its status as an artifact in order to pose questions about the relationship between fiction and reality" and "explores the theory of writing fiction through the practice of writing fiction." Additionally, Werner Wolf has conceptualized self-reference to include not only "intra-systemic relationship(s)," but also intertextual and intermedial references. The relationships and references included in Wolf's conception of self-reference allow Strauss, his collaborators, and later interpreters to insert their own voices into operas and, arguably, even give themselves agency in the drama. This thesis examines this voice and agency in order to arrive at a deeper understanding of Strauss's aesthetics and those of his librettists and later interpreters with particular attention to three operas: Ariadne auf Naxos (the 1912 and 1916 versions), Intermezzo (1924), and Capriccio (1942). Additionally, I examine Christof Loy's 2011 production of Die Frau ohne Schatten> (1919) as an example of complex layers self-reference added to a work by a later interpreter and as a suggestion for future avenues of research regarding operatic self-referentiality