AMICOR Medicina

This Blog, is one of a set of AMICOR instruments of communication, where I use to refer relevant material I select for myself, making it also available for my colleagues and friends. The main blog address is http://amicor.blogspot.com This one is specific for medical education. To see more information on compliance with the Health On The Net Foundation's initiative (HONCode) visit http://achutti.blogspot.com

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Coordinator of the list AMICOR. Friends and colleagues, mostly from Brazil. The AMICOR list is where I use to post relevant scientific material I find surfing in the INTERNET. Also references sent by other member of the list.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Physicians in opera--reflection of medical history and public perception -- Willich 333 (7582): 1333 -- BMJ

Physicians in opera--reflection of medical history and public perception -- Willich 333 (7582): 1333 -- BMJ
Music plays an increasingly important part in medicine, such as in specific care for performing artists.1 But what about the representation of medicine in music?
A systematic search in theatrical reference books yielded 40 operas from three centuries in which physicians appear on stage (see table on bmj.com). I selected several operas as specific examples in the history of opera. I analysed the role and function of the physician in different categories including the character and importance of his role, his function and basis of knowledge, and his social status. I also looked at the historical context.
Eighteenth century
Opera developed in the late Renaissance and early Baroque.2 There are no doctors in the operas of Monteverdi, Gluck, or Handel, partly because the stories are often based on material from mythology or antiquity. In the 18th century, however, our colleagues enter the stage.
Le Nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro, premiered 1786) is one of Mozart's great operas. Among the secondary characters is Dr Bartolo, a physician who does not appear in his role as a healer. He is angry with Figaro and threatens to take revenge on him for having once helped to abduct his ward Rosina, who Bartolo wanted to marry. Towards the end of the opera, however, Dr Bartolo sides with Figaro after finding out by chance that Figaro is his lost son who had been abducted as a baby. /.../