Arthur
Groos
Department of German Studies
182 Goldwin Smith Hall
Cornell Universitiy
Ithaca, NY 14853
Phone: (607) 255-5265
Fax: (607) 255-1454
e-mail:
abg3@cornell.edu
Arthur Groos is Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities and Professor
of German Studies, Medieval
Studies, and Music
at Cornell University, where he has taught since 1973, having served as Director
of Medieval Studies from 1974-86 and Chair of German Studies from 1986-91 and
1996-99. Co-editor of Reading Opera (Princeton, 1988) and co-author of Giacomo
Puccini: La bohème (Cambridge, 1986) and Medieval Christian Literary
Imagery: A Guide to Interpretation (Toronto, 1988), other publications include
Romancing the Grail: Genre, Science, and Quest in Wolfram's Parzival (Cornell,
1995), Madama Butterfly 1904-2004: Fonti e documenti (Lucca, 2005), five edited
volumes, and numerous articles on medieval literature, the Age of Goethe, and
German and Italian opera. Founding co-editor of the Cambridge Opera Journal,
he is also general editor of the Cambridge Studies in Opera and co-editor of
Transatlantische Studien, a monograph series on medieval and early modern culture.
A co-founder and Vice President of the Centro
studi Giacomo Puccini in Lucca, Italy, he is editor of Studi
pucciniani. The honors he has received include Guggenheim and
Senior Fulbright Fellowships, the American Society of Composers and Publishers
Deems Taylor Award, and an Alexander von Humboldt Research Prize. Research in
progress includes the Cambridge opera handbook on Tristan und Isolde, a book
on Madama Butterfly, and a study of Kaja Saariajo's L'Amour de loin.
Teaching and research interests in German include the courtly love-song (Minnesang)
and Arthurian romance, history of science, early modern city culture, and the
Age of Goethe. His teaching and research interests in music have focused principally
on opera, but also include the role of music in constructions of national identity,
text-music relationships, and contemporary music theatre.
In fall 2007-08, he will be Fowler Hamilton Senior Fellow at Christ Church,
Oxford, in spring 2008 the recipient of an Alexander von Humboldt Nachkontakt
Fellowship in Berlin.
Courses
Operatic Contacts (Soc. Hum. 405)
Opera and Culture (Music/German Studies
374)
Introduction to Middle High German Literature
(German Studies 405)
Middle High German Literature II (German
Studies 406)