Aussprachenormen für das Sprechen und Singen auf der Bühne im 19. Jahrhundert
Mit besonderer Berücksichtigung von Vokalen und Diphthongen
Abstract
The development of oral language norms prior to the publication of Theodor Siebs' set of rules "Deutsche Bühnenausprache" (1898) has hardly been systematically studied to date. Ulrich Thilo Hoffmann offers the first comprehensive overview of recognized and controversial pronunciation norms in the 19th century. His analysis of the stage-adequate pronunciation of vowels and diphthongs in the historical specialist literature includes Konrad Duden, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Julius Hey and Wilhelm Viëtor as well as numerous lesser-known authors. Hoffmann thus makes a linguistic contribution to the debate on the development of the German standard language. At the same time, his book is a research impulse for musicology, specifically for the examination of vocal pronunciation in historically informed performance practice. The results of the study are already being used in the projects Wagner-Lesarten and The Wagner Cycles, which are pursuing the historically informed performance of Richard Wagner's Ring des Nibelungen under the direction of Kent Nagano.
Keywords
pronunciation norms; stage; singing; phonetics; voice; singing; acting; stage singing; theater; pronunciation; Theodor Siebs; Wilhelm Viëtor; Julius Hey; Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm; Konrad Duden; German stage pronunciation; German standard language; sound-letter relationships; vocal pronunciation; operaDOI
10.26530/20.500.12657/88747ISBN
9783732989027, 9783732910304, 9783732989010Publisher
Frank & TimmePublisher website
https://www.frank-timme.de/Publication date and place
Berlin, 2024Series
Schriften zur Sprechwissenschaft und Phonetik, 31Classification
Theatre direction and production
Phonetics, phonology
19th century, c 1800 to c 1899
Music of film and stage