The intersection between literature and music is a major feature in Anglo-American cultural history. The present volume analyzes the transatlantic migration of European opera and its appropriation by some of the most important literary figures of the United States. The presence of opera in literary texts is always "operative" and results in artistic outputs possessing more articulated and tense vectors of meaning. The comparative method applied confirms the musical sensitivity of masters such as Poe, Whitman, Melville, Dickinson, Wharton, Cather, reveals the intriguing contradictions in the poetics of Emerson, Thoreau and James and vindicates the role of some minor figures who, through their involvement in the world of musical theater, contributed to the intercultural context.
Dynamics of Desacralization : Disenchanted Literary Talents
bookA gordian shape of dazzling hue : Serpent Symbolism in Keats's Poetry
Greta Colombani
bookSin's Multifaceted Aspects in Literary Texts
bookA Plurilingual Analysis of Four Russian-American Autobiographies : Cournos, Nabokov, Berberova, Shteyngart
Michele Russo
bookDifferent Voices : Gender and Posthumanism
bookLand Deep in Time : Canadian Historiographic Ethnofiction
bookIntertextualizing Collective American Memory : Southern, African American and Native American Fiction
Grażyna Maria Teresa Branny
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