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168 pages, Paperback
First published October 21, 2021


I hear Callas and I hear her masterful technique, her chimeric timbre, the liquid pulse of the vibrato—more than that, I hear her listening—to history, to the conductor, to the music, to herself. In addition to her numerous gifts, this was perhaps the greatest. The deception is so convincing that sometimes, when listening to Callas, I can almost hear her listening back.
To channel a perhaps apocryphal Callas, after hearing a recording by rival Renata Tebaldi: “What a lovely voice, but who cares?”
Her noble sacrifice, and the hero’s agonizing penitence, reiterate what is a stereotypical trope in opera narrative: the death of the soprano. Of the roughly 100 operas that are in regular repertory, 70 of them involve the death of the heroine, be it by disease, murder, or suicide.
The medicalization of aberrant female behavior was a clinical reaffirmation of an already present desire: to explain, diagnose, and control the eruptive or excessive woman. ...
The disempowerment of the female subject through hypnosis inspired fantasy fiction that ranged from the erotic to the gory, from Jules Claretie’s medical romance L’amour d’un interne (1881) to a scene in Léon Daudet’s grim, anti-medical science fiction novel Les Morticoles (1894) to the horror reenactment in André de Lourde’s Une Leçon à la Salpêtrière (1908) for the Grand Guignol Theater.

