Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito: A reappraisal
Progress! A new volume has appeared on Tito this past May, the third part of Stockholm Studies in Culture and Aesthetics series of monographs and edited volumes. Though the opera has moved into the mainstream, not much (of note?) has been written since Emanuele Senici’s 1997 Adapted to the Modern Stage: La clemenza di Tito in London and certainly nothing as important as Rice’s 1991 monography. You can download it here, because
Stockholm University Press (SUP) is an open access publisher of peer-reviewed academic journals and books. We aim to make journals and books affordable, and to give them the widest possible dissemination, so that researchers around the world can find and access the information they need without barriers.
Posted on August 23, 2018, in 1001 musings on la clemenza di tito, mozart and tagged adapted to the modern stage: la clemenza di tito in london, emanuele senici, mozart's la clemenza di tito: a reappraisal, stockholm university press. Bookmark the permalink. 11 Comments.
Thank you for the link, this seems like an interesting read!
Thanks a lot, great!
🙂 I haven’t read it yet, just skimmed a bit, but I am glad there is more commentary around it, of course. I’m also impressed they are putting it out for free downloads.
heart eyes for open access academia. You go, Sweden!
I know, I was very impressed. I hope more go that way. Isn’t that, after all, what knowledge is for?
oh yes. But off what will the people in the publishing houses live? It takes some serious public funding to really make knowledge widely accessible.
Serious public funding, yes. In my area many journals have the policy of letting open access fees be paid by the author or their institution and in some cases it is hard to separate those from fees for an easy review process. But here, it seems to be a serious journal at least on first sight, who knows how they fund it, maybe really publicly.
be paid by the author…? Christ.
they could put on a student Tito production 😉
But off what will the people in the publishing houses live?
my heart bleeds…
snort yeah, on look at the margins in library sales… not that it’s going to the people doing the grunt work.