His second last, and probably greatest, operatic achievement, starts on the coast of Cyprus with a storm of fantastic violence and with the first words of the hero, Otello, on a high B: Esultate, rejoice! The war has been won, the storm overcome: but the hero’s achievement is destroyed by his jealousy.
Cyprus appears to have been rescued: but the rescue has set of a rift that threatens the whole of Europe because of the way that the traumas of the early twentieth century are being relived.
The Great Depression has been a constant backdrop of debates about the post-2008 financial crisis but also about the Euro crisis. What made the interwar slump so intractable was that it was not just a financial issue, but also a crisis of democracy, of the international political system, and of social stability. It is now clear that contemporary Europe is reenacting that interwar upheaval.
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