Description
About the Author
Emily Wilbourne is Associate Professor of Musicology at Queens College and the Graduate Center in the City University of New York. She has previously published Seventeenth-Century Opera and the Sound of the Commedia dell'Arte (2016) and Lesbian/Opera: Elena Kats-Chernin's Iphis and Matricide: The Musical (2022); a collection of essays, co-edited with Suzanne G. Cusick, Acoustemologies in Contact: Sounding Subjects and Modes of Listening in Early Modernity (2021) is available via open access.
Reviews
Wilbourne offers an extensive and trail-brazing account of racialized voices in seventeenth-century Florence. Interdisciplinary in scope and meticulously researched, Wilbourne's incomparable work takes us on a tantalizing journey into the musical and performative worlds of early modern Italy's "unsung voices." This book will enthrall non-specialists and specialists alike, transforming our approaches to and understandings of enslavement, race, and the power of sound across the Mediterranean world. * Nicholas R. Jones, author of Staging Habla de Negros: Radical Performance of the African Diaspora in Early Modern Spain *
From one of the leading opera historians of her generation, Wilbourne's Voice, Slavery, and Race is a nuanced account of the reverberations between voice and race on the seventeenth-century stage. "Act I" reads the evidence of paintings, commedia dell'arte scenarios, libretti, and musical scores against a wealth of new documentation from Florentine archives, while "Act II" turns the spotlight on Giovannino Buonaccorsi, an enslaved Black soprano in the service of the Medici. In brilliant analyses that never skip a beat, Wilbourne pieces together a new and original history of racialized performances during the first century of Italian opera. * Kate van Orden, editor of Seachanges: Music in the Mediterranean and Atlantic Worlds, 1550-1800, I Tatti Research Series 2 *
The book, the product of careful study of archival materials on the Medici period of Florence, seeks to identify and unravel how "anachronistic scholarly assumptions about race have concealed the workings of the early modern imaginary". Wilbourne examines not only general archival documents but also scripts of Comedia del arte, librettos of period operas, and even music notation to exemplify ways in which class and foreignness were portrayed on stage. Her work broadens understanding of the mixed society that was Florence in the 17th century. Included is a substantial appendix that makes transparent the author's sources. Highly recommended. * Choice *
Voice, Slavery, and Race in Seventeenth-Century Florence reframes the place of racial difference in Western art music and provides a compelling pre-history to later racial formulations of the sonic. * New Books Network *
Awards
Winner of Winner, AMS Judy Tsou Critical Race Studies Award , work in the field of critical race and/or critical ethnic studies, American Musicological Society.
Book Information
ISBN 9780197646915
Author Emily Wilbourne
Format Hardback
Page Count 520
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 885g
Dimensions(mm) 168mm * 221mm * 64mm
 
             
                                                 
             
             
             
             
             
             
            