<p>French and Italian varieties of opera have intermingled and informed one another from the genre&#39;s first decades onward. Yet we still have only a hazy view of why and how those intersections occurred and what they meant to a given opera&#39;s creators and audiences. Margaret Butler&#39;s Musical Theater in Eighteenth-Century Parma: Entertainment Sovereignty Reform tackles these issues examining performance spectatorship and politics in the Bourbon-controlled northern Italian city of Parma in the mid-eighteenth century. Reconstructing the French context for Tommaso Traetta&#39;s Italian operas that consciously set out to fuse French and Italian elements Butler explores recreations in Parma of operas and ballets by Jean-Philippe Rameau and other French composers. She shows that Parma&#39;s brand of entertainment is one in which Traetta&#39;s operas occupy points along a continuum representing a long and rich tradition of adaptation and generic play. Such a reading calls into question the very notion of operatic reform showing the need for a more flexible conception of a volatile moment in opera&#39;s history. The book elucidates the complicated circumstances in which entertainments were created that spoke not only to Parma&#39;s multicultural audiences but also to an increasingly cosmopolitan Europe. MARGARET R. BUTLER is Associate Professor of Musicology at the University of Florida.</p>
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