1st Edition

Theological Anthropology in Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito Sin, Grace, and Conversion

By Steffen Lösel Copyright 2023
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book asks what theological messages theologically educated Catholics in late-eighteenth-century Prague might have perceived in Mozart’s late opera seria La clemenza di Tito. The book’s thesis is two-fold: first, that Catholics might have heard the opera’s advocacy of enlightened absolutism as a celebration of a distinctly Catholic understanding of political governance; and second, that they might have found in the opera a metaphor for the relationship between a gracious God and humanity caught up in sin, expressed as sexual concupiscence, pride, and lust for power. The book develops its interpretation of the opera through narrative character analyses of the main protagonists, an examination of their dramatic development, and by paying attention to the biblical and theological associations they may have evoked in a Catholic audience. The book is geared towards academic readers interested in opera, theologians, historians, and those who work at the intersection of theology and the arts. It contributes to a better understanding of the theological implications of Mozart’s operatic work.

    Introduction

    1 Contexts

    2 Political Theology

    3 Tito: Grace Freely Given

    4 Sesto: Concupiscence and Conversion

    5 Vitellia: Lust for Power

    Epilogue

    Bibliography

    Biography

    Steffen Lösel is Associate Professor in the Practice of Systematic Theology at Candler School of Theology, Emory University, USA.