Opera and the Built Environment
The first book to examine the classic Italian opera house in a global context.
 
In Opera and the Built Environment, music scholar Laura Vasilyeva considers the remarkable mass construction of opera houses around the world since the 1800s and the no-less-remarkable bids to standardize the architectural features of their interiors across this vast theatrical infrastructure. Now known as the teatro all’italiana, this style of architecture—made most famous by Milan’s Teatro alla Scala—is characterized by auditoria with tiers of stacked boxes and a dominant red hue.
 
With attention to the sensuous dimensions of their auditoria, from their surfaces to their atmospheres to their acoustics and thresholds, Vasilyeva reveals the calculated reasons these theaters took on the form they did. The result is a book that reveals unknown associations between the Italian opera house and matters of environmental destruction, empire, and belonging, showing us new and unexpected patterns in how opera connects to the world we know.
1147038698
Opera and the Built Environment
The first book to examine the classic Italian opera house in a global context.
 
In Opera and the Built Environment, music scholar Laura Vasilyeva considers the remarkable mass construction of opera houses around the world since the 1800s and the no-less-remarkable bids to standardize the architectural features of their interiors across this vast theatrical infrastructure. Now known as the teatro all’italiana, this style of architecture—made most famous by Milan’s Teatro alla Scala—is characterized by auditoria with tiers of stacked boxes and a dominant red hue.
 
With attention to the sensuous dimensions of their auditoria, from their surfaces to their atmospheres to their acoustics and thresholds, Vasilyeva reveals the calculated reasons these theaters took on the form they did. The result is a book that reveals unknown associations between the Italian opera house and matters of environmental destruction, empire, and belonging, showing us new and unexpected patterns in how opera connects to the world we know.
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Opera and the Built Environment

Opera and the Built Environment

by Laura Vasilyeva
Opera and the Built Environment

Opera and the Built Environment

by Laura Vasilyeva

Paperback(First Edition)

$30.00 
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Overview

The first book to examine the classic Italian opera house in a global context.
 
In Opera and the Built Environment, music scholar Laura Vasilyeva considers the remarkable mass construction of opera houses around the world since the 1800s and the no-less-remarkable bids to standardize the architectural features of their interiors across this vast theatrical infrastructure. Now known as the teatro all’italiana, this style of architecture—made most famous by Milan’s Teatro alla Scala—is characterized by auditoria with tiers of stacked boxes and a dominant red hue.
 
With attention to the sensuous dimensions of their auditoria, from their surfaces to their atmospheres to their acoustics and thresholds, Vasilyeva reveals the calculated reasons these theaters took on the form they did. The result is a book that reveals unknown associations between the Italian opera house and matters of environmental destruction, empire, and belonging, showing us new and unexpected patterns in how opera connects to the world we know.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226844466
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 11/19/2025
Series: Opera Lab: Explorations in History, Technology, and Performance
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Laura Vasilyeva is associate professor of musicology at Johns Hopkins University. Her work has appeared in a range of journals, from the Cambridge Opera Journal to The Opera Quarterly. This is her first book.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations and Tables

1. Architecture
Divisive Architecture
Distributed Architecture
Blueprint
2. Surfaces
(Chromo)phobia
Red
Sur-Face
Erasure
3. Atmosphere
Ransacked Earth
Pure Air
Dirty Opera
Escapist Fantasies
4. Acoustics
Orchestra Chamber
Calibrating Acoustics
Protected Space
Acoustic Signatures
Pure Sound?
5. Thresholds
Ethics of Boundaries
Colonial Metal
Cellular Expansion

Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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