Musical Symbolism in the Operas of Debussy and Bartók Trauma, Gender, and the Unfolding of the Unconscious

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-07-22
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

Two early twentieth-century operas -- Debussy's Pelleas et Melisande (1902) and Bartok's Duke Bluebeard's Castle (1911) -- transformed the traditional major/minor scale system into a new musical language. This new language was based almost exclusively on interactions between folk modalitiesand their more abstract symmetrical transformations. Elliott Antokoletz reveals not only the new musical language of these operas, but also the way in which they share a profound correspondence with the growing symbolist literary movement as reflected in their libretti. In the symbolist literarymovement, authors reacted to the realism of nineteenth-century theatre by conveying meaning by suggestion, rather than direct statement. The symbolist conception included a new interest in psychological motivation and consciousness manifested itself in metaphor, ambiguity, and symbol. In this groundbreaking study, Antokoletz links the new musical language of these two operas with this symbolist conception and reveals a direct connection between the Debussy and Bartok operas. He shows how the opposing harmonic extremes serve as a basis for the dramatic polarity between real-lifebeings and symbols of fate. He also explores how the libretti by Franco-Belgian poet Maurice Maeterlinck (Pelleas et Melisande) and his Hungarian disciple Bela Balazs (Duke Bluebeard's Castle) transform the internal concept of subconscious motivation into an external one, one in which fate controlshuman emotions and actions. Using a pioneering approach to theoretical analysis, Antokoletz, explores the new musico-dramatic relations within their larger historical, social psychological, philosophical, and aesthetic contexts.

Author Biography


Elliott Antokoletz is Professor of Musicology at the University of Texas at Austin. He received the Bela Bartok Memorial Plaque and Diploma from the Hungarian Government in 1981. He is author of several books and co-editor of the International Journal of Musicology.

Table of Contents

1. Backgrounds and Development: The New Musical Language and Its Correspondence with Psycho-Dramatic Principles of Symbolist Opera
3(11)
2. The New Musical Language
14(16)
3. Trauma, Gender, and the Unfolding of the Unconscious
30(25)
4. Pelléas et Mélisande: Polarity of Characterizations: Human Beings as Real-Life Individuals and Instruments of Fate
55(29)
5. Pelléas et Mélisande: Fate and the Unconscious: Transformational Function of the Dominant Ninth Chord; Symbolism of Sonority
84(33)
6. Pelléas et Mélisande: Musico-Dramatic Turning Point: Intervallic Expansion as Symbol of Dramatic Tension and Change of Mood
117(30)
7. Pelléas et Mélisande: Melisande as Christ Symbol-Life, Death, and Resurrection-and Motivic Reinterpretations of the Whole-Tone Dyad
147(26)
8. Pelléas et Mélisande: Circuity of Fate and Resolution of Mélisande's Dissonant Pentatonic-Whole-Tone Conflict
173(9)
9. Duke Bluebeard's Castle: Psychological Motivation: Symbolic Interaction of Diatonic, Whole-Tone, and Chromatic Extremes
182(25)
10. Duke Bluebeard's Castle: Toward Character Reversal: Reassignment of Pentatonic and Whole-Tone Spheres 207(27)
11. Duke Bluebeard's Castle: The Nietzschean Condition and Polarity of Characterizations: Diatonic-Chromatic Extremes 234(14)
12. Duke Bluebeard's Castle: Final Transformation and Retreat into Eternal Darkness: Synthesis of Pentatonic/Diatonic and Whole-Tone Spheres 248(14)
13. Symbolism and Expressionism in Other Early Twentieth-Century Operas 262(29)
Epilogue 291(4)
Notes 295(36)
Works Cited 331(10)
Index 341

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