EUNUCHI CONJUGIUM: THE MARRIAGE OF A CASTRATO IN EARLY MODERN GERMANY The research and writing of this study were made possible in large part through a Summer Stipend from the National Endowment for the Humanities and a Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies. Some of the material discussed here was presented at the Sixty-Ninth AnnualMeeting of the American Musicological Society in Houston, Texas, November 2003. I wish to thank Howard Louthan for his helpful comments on an earlier draft of this essay, and Paula Higgins for many profitable discussions on the subject. I also thank David Bachrach and Margaret Garnett for providing translations of the Latin texts, and Mathias Thierbach for assisting with several German translations. Finally, I thank Bonnie Blackburn for her editorial suggestions, which have improved this article, and Leofranc Holford-Strevens for his invaluable assistance with a number of translation issues.
Frandsen, Mary E.
Журнал:
Early Music History
Аннотация:
Although the castrato played a central role in seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century musical life, he occupied a position at the margins of early modern society. As a consequence of the surgical alteration of his body and the superior musical training that he received as compensation for his ‘acquiescence’ in that act, he found himself navigating a path through a bifurcated world. For him, the surgery had both public and private consequences: while society would publicly celebrate his vocal virtuosity, it would also circumscribe his private activities, and withhold from him the right to marry, or to enjoy an intimate relationship with a woman. As he soon realised, the realities of his special status meant that many of those who would revel in his phenomenal vocal abilities would also ridicule him as effeminate and as a sexual misfit, and would accuse him, ironically, of possessing a voracious sexual appetite that rendered him a threat to women. When he travelled north to work in German-speaking societies, particularly those in which the Lutheran confession held sway, that simple migratory act instantly compounded the number of those qualities that contributed to his ‘Otherness’: while in his homeland his standing as an emasculate and a musician already set him apart from others, in Lutheran regions, his status as a foreigner, an adherent of an outlawed (and highly suspect) confession, and a member of a privileged group that moved in the rarefied atmosphere of the local court all served to intensify his marginality.
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