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The Mask of Bourgeois Masculinity and Franz Schreker’s _Die Gezeichneten_

Hsieh, Amanda

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Abstract

This article interrogates how Franz Schreker's Die Gezeichneten and its early reception reflected an uneasiness about the confines of manhood. As an opera with a complex genesis and a difficult reception history, Die Gezeichneten's allure comes from its resistance to being reduced to only one thing. I nevertheless seek to locate this opera around the time of its premiere towards the end of the First World War. I contend that Die Gezeichneten and its immediate reception charted a key transition in Austro-German masculinity. Specifically, the opera's early performances marked a move away from the period's normative models of bourgeois masculinity (and their corresponding ideas about appearance, health and nationhood) and towards an alternative masculinity preoccupied with degeneracy. I focus on the opera's masks, arguing that, through acts of concealment and disclosure, the opera's two male protagonists struggle to negotiate expectations of an emotionally controlled modern manhood, calling attention to wartime anxieties about what it meant to be a man. Such anxieties resulted in a hardening of attitudes towards the masculine gender, which influenced contemporary music criticism too. Die Gezeichneten's highly sensationalist early reviews relied on a language of degeneracy. Yet I suggest that the opera's initial reception captured a critical moment in this language's history before it was subsumed under Nazi ideology.

Citation

Hsieh, A. (2022). The Mask of Bourgeois Masculinity and Franz Schreker’s _Die Gezeichneten_. Cambridge Opera Journal, 34(3), 338-363. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954586722000246

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jan 6, 2023
Publication Date 2022-11
Deposit Date Aug 19, 2022
Publicly Available Date Jul 4, 2023
Journal Cambridge Opera Journal
Print ISSN 0954-5867
Electronic ISSN 1474-0621
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 34
Issue 3
Pages 338-363
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954586722000246

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