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The Queen's Throat Quotes

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The Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire The Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire by Wayne Koestenbaum
304 ratings, 3.94 average rating, 22 reviews
The Queen's Throat Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“Listeners love when opera dethrones or kills language; the regicide, on these occasions, is the revolutionary, pleasure-seeking, penetrated, tickled ear. Opera theory tells us that words master music, but we, in our secret hearts, know music's superiority; and this destruction of language, this reversal of hierarchy, makes opera a fit object for the enthusiasms of sex-and-gender dissidents.”
Wayne Koestenbaum, Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality And The Mystery Of Desire
“Opera has the power to warn you that you have wasted your life. You haven't acted on your desires. You've suffered a stunted, vicarious existence. You've silenced your passions. The volume, height, depth, lushness, and excess of operatic utterance reveal, by contrast, how small your gestures have been until now, how impoverished your physicality; you have only used a fraction of your bodily endowment, and your throat is closed.”
Wayne Koestenbaum, The Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality and the Mystery of Desire
“The beauty and magnitude of a diva's voice resides, so the iconography suggests, in her deformity. Her voice is beautiful because she herself is not-and her ugliness is interpreted as a sign of moral and social deviance. Reading biographies of divas, I can't ignore the repeated references to physical flaws-for example, Benedetta Pisaroni's "features horribly disfigured by small-pox," prompting spectators to shut their eyes "so as to hear without being condemned to see." Audiences speculated that Maria Malibran was not anatomically a woman, but an androgyne or hermaphrodite-an aberrant physique to match her voice's magic power.”
Wayne Koestenbaum, Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality And The Mystery Of Desire
“The solitary operatic feast, the banquet for one, onanism through the ear: taking an evening out of my life to listen to Simon Boccanegra, I feel I am locked in the bathroom eating a quart of ice cream, that I have lost all my friends, that I am committing some violently antisocial act, like wearing lipstick to school.”
Wayne Koestenbaum, Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality And The Mystery Of Desire