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E-book
Author Zuccarini, Carlo, author.

Title Enjoying the operatic voice : a neuropsychoanalytic exploration of the operatic reception experience / by Carlo Zuccarini
Published Wilmington, Delaware : Vernon Press, [2018]
©2018

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Description 1 online resource (xxv, 282 pages) : illustrations
Series Cognitive science and psychology
Cognitive science and psychology.
Contents Setting the scene -- A (very) concise history of opera -- The historical tension between words and music in opera -- Prima la musica o le parole? -- The 'layers' of opera -- Feminism, queer theory, gender and opera -- Opera at the nexus of psychoanalysis and the neurosciences (neuropsychoanalysis) -- Opera and psychoanalysis -- Applying psychoanalysis to music -- some considerations -- The voice and the gaze -- The big 'O' in opera -- Symbolic, imaginary and real -- The operatic voice and the fetish -- The transitional experience of opera -- Music and (neuro)science -- The origins of music and singing -- Music: culture, society, language and memory -- The overlap between the neural processing of music and language -- How music is processed in the brain and enjoyed -- The music and emotion debate -- Music, emotion, gender and sexuality -- The duet between psychoanalysis and neuroscience -- What is the origin and nature of the powerful emotional response that is evoked in some listeners by the operatic voice? -- Does enjoyment of the operatic voice have something erotic about it? -- The reception of the operatic voice: from the neural processing of acoustic input to the subjective experience of vocal jouissance -- a theoretical formulation -- Grand finale
Summary "There has been a long-standing and mutually-informing association between psychoanalysis, literature and the arts. Surprisingly, given the oral/aural basis of the 'talking cure', music has largely been overlooked by psychoanalysis. Notably, neuroscientific research investigating music reception and production has been steadily increasing in range and scope over the years. However, in order to avoid confounding factors, empirical studies have focused primarily on non-vocal music. Remarkably, operatic vocal music has not featured prominently in either field. Yet the multi-dimensional, multi-layered nature of opera, which fuses together a number of different arts, would appear to provide fertile soil for both disciplines. This book aims to fill that gap, providing a stepping stone for further research. It leverages the individual strengths of psychoanalysis and neuroscience both separately and jointly as the inter-discipline of neuropsychoanalysis. By combining various theories of mind with knowledge about music processing in the brain, this book comprehensively examines the operatic reception experience, providing an account in subjective as well as objective terms. It explores the bittersweet enjoyment of operatic vocal music, which can literally move an operaphile to tears. The explanation for this may be found in a number of subjective dynamics that are unique to the reception of opera, rather than in any distinct objective neural processes, which are common to the reception of all music. These subjective dynamics, which are recruited during neural processing, are triggered by the equally unique features of the operatic voice, in combination with a number of auxiliary elements that are specific to opera. This book will be of interest to academics in a broad range of science and arts disciplines related to music perception and performance, such as music psychology and operatic performance. It may also appeal to passionate operaphiles who wish to understand what drives their addiction"--Publisher's description
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-276) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Opera -- Psychological aspects
Opera -- Physiological aspects
Psychoanalysis and music.
Psychoanalysis and music
Opera -- Psychological aspects
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781622736171
1622736176