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ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE OF THEATRE & PERFORMANCE Module Specification 1. GENERAL INFORMATION Title Monteverdi Module code OS505 Credit rating 20 Level 5 Indicative Contact hours n/a Pre-requisite modules Level 4 and OS501 and OS502 Co-requisite modules none School responsible School of Performance Member of staff responsible Dr F Jane Schopf ECT* 10 Notional hours of Learning** 200 2. AIMS The module aims to: engage you with detailed study of the social and cultural contexts and performance conditions of early opera enable you to make a detailed analysis of its innovative synthesis of music, dramatic action and design bring about a deepened awareness of the conditions in which opera originated and began develop, with an especial focus on Monteverdi contextualise early and significant developments in form and composition 3. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE MODULE The module is centred on the achievement of Monteverdi as both a composer of non-operatic music, exponent of the ‘new style’, and as a musico-dramatist. The major concern, apart from the historical foundation laid during the period, is the question of the nature of the melodrama itself and the sometimes conflicting demands of music, words and staging. In addition to representative instrumental and vocal music (including “Second Practice”, monody and madrigal), the works studied will include Peri Euridice, Monteverdi, La Favola d’Orfeo, Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria and L’Incoronazione di Poppea. * ECT (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System): There are 2 UK credits for every 1 ECT credit, in accordance with the Credit Framework (QAA). Therefore if a module is worth 20 UK credits, this will equate to 10 ECT. ** Notional hours of learning: The number of hours which it is expected that a learner (at a particular level) will spend, on average, to achieve the specified learning outcomes at that level. It is expected that there will be 10 hours of notional study associated with every 1 credit achieved. Therefore if a module is worth 20 credits, this will equate to 200 notional study hours, in accordance with the Credit Framework (QAA). ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE OF THEATRE & PERFORMANCE Module Specification 4. INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES Category of outcome Knowledge and understanding Intellectual skills Practical skills Transferable skills and personal qualities You will be able to: situate operas within their historical, social and political contexts place Monteverdi in his historical and relative contexts evaluate judgements of taste and value in a range of critical domains understand and discuss significant developments in early opera gain a detailed knowledge of the main artistic movements, traditions and ideologies that influence and informed the genesis of opera demonstrate an awareness of the working contexts and organisation of early opera production identify and practise primary study skills and scholarly research methods identify specific models of theory and analysis appropriate for the study of opera, and begin to apply these in critical assessments identify and apply analytical approaches appropriate for systematic historical and contextual inquiry undertake detailed comparative analyses of operas and approaches to opera practice utilise specialised skills in comparative opera analysis utilise specialist skills in music analysis utilise specialist skills in score reading maintain scholarly modes of presentation and approaches to referencing and bibliography present a structured argument in written assignments undertake a range of formal assessments to a range of specified briefings (assignments) read and follow musical notation respond to the precise terms of a designated assignment develop and apply skills of analysis critical writing locate and discuss primary material within historical and theoretical frameworks identify the theoretical assumptions informing the writings/practices of others start to undertake relevant research and make effective use of supporting primary and secondary evidence and source 2 ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE OF THEATRE & PERFORMANCE Module Specification formulate a comprehensive response to a designated assignment maintain scholarly modes of presentation and approaches to referencing and bibliography present a structured argument in written assignments engage in independent scholarly research and discursive written analysis undertake a range of formal assessments to a range of specified briefings (assignments) engage in critical self-assessment read and follow musical notation respond to the precise terms of a designated assignment develop and apply skills of analysis in research, critical writing performance and music locate and discuss primary material within historical and theoretical frameworks identify the theoretical assumptions informing their own work and the writings/practices of others undertake relevant research and make effective use of supporting primary and secondary evidence and source formulate a comprehensive response to a designated assignment 5. LEARNING AND TEACHING PROCESSES (INCLUDING THE USE OF E-LEARNING) You will receive written text via our E-learning platform. The material has staged exercises and tasks throughout, many being interactive. All exercises have full explanatory responses. 6. ASSESSMENT (INCLUDING THE USE OF E-LEARNING) Assessment task Length Formative, multi-part 2000 +/- 10% Weighting within module (if relevant) 40% Summative (essay based) 3000 +/- 10% 60% 7. FURTHER INFORMATION Semester 1 or 2 Available on which programme(s)? Opera Studies 3 ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE OF THEATRE & PERFORMANCE Module Specification Available as Free Choice (UG) or to other programmes (PG)? Content No Weeks 1 and 2 Pastoral, intermedio, favola in musica Immediate predecessors of opera in the late sixteenth-century theatre in Italy; Jacopo Peri’s Euridice (1600) and the workings of the Florentine recitative. Weeks 3 and 4 Monteverdi’s Orfeo 1 The première of Orfeo; the structure and music Weeks 5 and 6 Orfeo 2 Weeks 7 and 8 Other musical theatre Other theatrical genres in the early seventeenth-century Italian court; intermedio, Monteverdi’s Ballo delle ingrate (1608), Combattimento di Tancredi et Clorinda (1624). Weeks 9 and 10 Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria 1 Monteverdi in Venice; “public” opera; Il ritorno d’Ulisse as a “transitional” work; from epic to libretto Weeks 11 and 12 Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria 2 Weeks 13 and 14 L’incoronazione Poppea 1 From myth to history; the Accademia degli Incogniti and its influence on trends in Venetian opera; a moral imperative. Case-studies (1). Weeks 15 and 16 L’incoronazione Poppea 2 Case-studies (2). Who wrote Poppea and whether it matters. Issues of reception history Teaching Method Distributed written material with graded exercises and tasks, many interactive, and all with responses. Specified texts Written Tutor feedback on submitted work, online tutorials and support VLE Wide use of online resources, interactive exercises with responses Chat rooms and online tutorials Feedback Given via chat rooms and emails and fully annotated written comments on submitted work 4 ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE OF THEATRE & PERFORMANCE Module Specification Indicative Reading Arnold, D. and N. Fortune, ed. The New Monteverdi Companion. London: 1985 Bianconi, Lorenzo, and Thomas Walker. “Production, Consumption and Political Function of Seventeenth-Century Opera.” Early Music History Vol 4 (1984): Carter, Tim. “Non occorre nominare tanti musici: Private Patronage and Public Ceremony in Late Sixteenth-Century Florence.” I Tatti Studies: Essays in the Renaissance 4 (1991) Carter, Tim. “‘In Love’s Harmonious Consort’?: Penelope and the Interpretation of Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria.” Cambridge Opera Journal Vol 5, No. 1 (March 1993) Curtis, Alan. “La Poppea Impasticciata, or Who Wrote the Music to L’incoronazione (1643)?” Journal of the American Musicological Society Vol 42, No. 1 (Spring 1989) McClary, Susan. Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality. Minnesota & London: University of Minnesota Press, 1991. Palisca, Claude Studies in the History of Italian Music and Music Theory. Oxford: OUP, 1994 Rosand, Ellen. “Seneca and the Interpretation of L’incoronazione di Poppea.” Journal of the American Musicological Society Vol 38, No. 1 (Spring 1985) Tomlinson, Gary.“Madrigal, Monody, and Monteverdi’s ‘via naturale alla immitatione’.” Journal of the American Musicological Society Vol 34, No. 1 (Spring 1981) Whenham, John, ed. Claudio Monteverdi: “Orfeo.” Cambridge Opera Handbooks. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986 Proposed start date September 2012 Date of approval (for UoM office use) Information updated on Date of current version (for RBC use) 10.1.12 5