In this bold recasting of operatic history, Gary Tomlinson connects
opera to shifting visions of metaphysics and selfhood across the last
four hundred years. The operatic voice, he maintains, has always acted
to open invisible, supersensible realms to the perceptions of its
listeners. In doing so, it has articulated changing relations between
the self and metaphysics. Tomlinson examines these relations as they
have been described by philosophers from Ficino through Descartes, Kant,
and Nietzsche, to Adorno, all of whom worked to define the subject's
place in both material and metaphysical realms. The author then shows
how opera, in its own cultural arena, distinct from philosophy, has
repeatedly brought to the stage these changing relations of the subject
to the particular metaphysics it presumes.
Covering composers from Jacopo Peri to Wagner, from Lully to Verdi, and
from Mozart to Britten, Metaphysical Song details interactions of song,
words, drama, and sounds used by creators of opera to fill in the
outlines of the subjectivities they envisioned. The book offers
deep-seated explanations for opera's enduring fascination in European
elite culture and suggests some of the profound difficulties that have
unsettled this fascination since the time of Wagner.