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OverviewAccording to a widely held view in eighteenth-century Britain, Britons were somehow inherently unmusical, and this supposed shortcoming was, in fact, a virtue. George Colman explicated this view when he wrote in 1762 that ""for arts and arms, a Briton is the thing! John Bull was made to roarDLbut not to sing."" However, he was responding to an already changing cultural landscape. The 1760s saw the emergence of English-language opera, and the rise of a new generation of British singers ready and able to perform it. In response to long-held suspicions toward Italian opera and its singers, this turn was a bold attempt to offer British audiences a new vision of themselves: as a singing nation. This is the bookâs central theme: the question of whether Britons could sing, and how it was negotiated in public discourse within an evolving cultural landscape. Drawing on a wide variety of primary sources, the text follows three groups of groundbreaking singersDLhigh-pitched men, virtuosic prima donnas, and JewsDLwho sought to shift the landscape of opera in Britain, all the while challenging the prevailing gender norms and social categories. These attempts gave rise to a certain interplayDLbetween an evolving cultural form seeking approval, and an insistent reticence that clung to the conventional. Eventually, the effort to adopt opera as a national vehicle, over a period of several decades, only helped to galvanize a guarded attitude toward musicDLan attitude that Britons were forced to admit was constitutive of their national identity. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Uri Erman (Lecturer, Lecturer, Shalem College, Jerusalem)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc ISBN: 9780197784044ISBN 10: 0197784046 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 17 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: To order Table of ContentsIntroduction Part I. Setting the Stage 1: The Anti-Operatic Discourse in Early Eighteenth-Century Britain Part II. Voices of Difference 2: The High-Pitched Man and British Masculinity: Arne's Artaxerxes and Its Progeny 3: Domesticating the British Virtuosa 4: Between the Synagogue and the Theater: The Jew as Singer Part III. Nineteenth-Century Configurations 5: Opera and Heroic Masculinity: Incledon and Braham 6: The Singing Cat: Angelica Catalani and British Audiences ConclusionReviewsAuthor InformationUri Erman is a cultural historian of eighteenth and nineteenth-century Britain. A lecturer in the Humanities Program at Shalem College, Jerusalem, he studies how audiences made sense of performersDLusing opera and theater as lenses through which to explore questions of identity, gender, and social order. His work has appeared in journals including Eighteenth-Century Studies and Journal of British Studies, as well as in edited volumes. This is his first book. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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