BHUM 17A29 - Opera and Politics in the United States
This course aims to examine the relation between music and American politics in that most refined of art forms:
Opera.
The course will introduce students to the history of American opera focusing on 20 th and 21 st century works,
composers and performers. The aim of this course is to explore the way politics inspired American composers to
highlight the circulation of ideas and the political roles of art and the artists. Following different types of documents
(video extracts, scholarly and press articles, book chapters, photographs and reports), we will closely examine three
main topics: the American political resonances in the works of American composers and especially John Adams, the
effects of the Black Lives Matter movement on the world of opera and focusing on the recent works of Terence
Blanchard and Anthony Davis, and American opera as a cultural soft power since americanization of the genre.
Sandrine COYEZ
Séminaire
English
No previous knowledge of opera or musical skills needed for this course.
- Susan Feder, Anthony McGill,Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Racial Injustice in the Classical Music Professions: A Call to Action, in Michael Beckerman, Paul Boghossian, Classical Music: Contemporary Perspectives and Challenges, Norton & Company,