From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience

Current studies of burlesque position it as a subversive genre that questioned cultural and social hierarchies and spoke to diverse audiences. Central to this interpretation are burlesque’s juxtapositions of high and low culture, particularly popular and operatic music. This article problematizes th...

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Main Author: Cormac, Joanne
Format: Article
Published: Tayor & Francis 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36242/
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author Cormac, Joanne
author_facet Cormac, Joanne
author_sort Cormac, Joanne
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Current studies of burlesque position it as a subversive genre that questioned cultural and social hierarchies and spoke to diverse audiences. Central to this interpretation are burlesque’s juxtapositions of high and low culture, particularly popular and operatic music. This article problematizes this view, proposing that mid-Victorian burlesques lost their satirical bite. Demonstrating little concern for the tastes or interests of the poorer or the most elite members of the audience, they specifically targeted the bourgeoisie. The article places three mid-Victorian burlesques in the wider context of the commercial development of the West End post the 1851 Great Exhibition. It proposes that this broader context, and not the genre’s perceived social role, provides the key to understanding the impulses driving the musical choices. It argues that juxtapositions of ‘high’ and ‘low’ music were far from subversive, rather they were included for commercial reasons, offering variety, but variety within strict bourgeois limits.
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spelling nottingham-362422020-05-04T18:44:58Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36242/ From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience Cormac, Joanne Current studies of burlesque position it as a subversive genre that questioned cultural and social hierarchies and spoke to diverse audiences. Central to this interpretation are burlesque’s juxtapositions of high and low culture, particularly popular and operatic music. This article problematizes this view, proposing that mid-Victorian burlesques lost their satirical bite. Demonstrating little concern for the tastes or interests of the poorer or the most elite members of the audience, they specifically targeted the bourgeoisie. The article places three mid-Victorian burlesques in the wider context of the commercial development of the West End post the 1851 Great Exhibition. It proposes that this broader context, and not the genre’s perceived social role, provides the key to understanding the impulses driving the musical choices. It argues that juxtapositions of ‘high’ and ‘low’ music were far from subversive, rather they were included for commercial reasons, offering variety, but variety within strict bourgeois limits. Tayor & Francis 2017-05-08 Article PeerReviewed Cormac, Joanne (2017) From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience. Journal of the Royal Musical Association, 142 (1). pp. 69-108. ISSN 1471-6933 Burlesque Victorian Opera West End Middle Class http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02690403.2017.1286124 doi:10.1080/02690403.2017.1286124 doi:10.1080/02690403.2017.1286124
spellingShingle Burlesque
Victorian
Opera
West End
Middle Class
Cormac, Joanne
From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title_full From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title_fullStr From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title_full_unstemmed From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title_short From satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-Victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
title_sort from satirical piece to commercial product: the mid-victorian opera burlesque and its bourgeois audience
topic Burlesque
Victorian
Opera
West End
Middle Class
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36242/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36242/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36242/