<i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation

Premiered at the 2024 Adelaide Festival, <i>Is This the Gate?</i> is an opera excerpt composed by Nicholas Lens and set to a libretto written by J. M. Coetzee. It is adapted from the last section of Coetzee’s novel <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> (2003), revolving around the eponym...

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Main Author: Xingyu Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-03-01
Series:Humanities
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/3/55
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author Xingyu Lin
author_facet Xingyu Lin
author_sort Xingyu Lin
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description Premiered at the 2024 Adelaide Festival, <i>Is This the Gate?</i> is an opera excerpt composed by Nicholas Lens and set to a libretto written by J. M. Coetzee. It is adapted from the last section of Coetzee’s novel <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> (2003), revolving around the eponymous character’s trial before the gate in the afterworld. This article explores the literary, musical and dramaturgical elements of <i>Is This the Gate</i>? and contends that the adaptation, despite its brevity and incompleteness, indexes and reworks some of the most important intertexts, localities and motifs that connect Coetzee’s early and late works. Allusions to Kafka and Dante frame the scenario for Costello in limbo—a state mirroring a writer’s late-in-life predicament—while references to Australia’s weather and fauna reflect Coetzee’s relationship to his South African roots and adopted home. Further, Costello’s conviction that she is “a secretary of the invisible” holds clues to Coetzee’s deployment of voices and fictional personae since his debut, <i>Dusklands</i> (1974). The last few acts of the opera excerpt evoke themes of desire and mortality that chime with Coetzee’s other Costello narratives, including his latest collection, <i>The Pole and Other Stories</i> (2023). The adaptation ends with Costello’s declaration of her subjectivity, which suggests a writer’s yearning and resolution to go beyond the threshold of life and death.
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spelling doaj-art-eab93e56105d407ca998195f517982fb2025-08-20T02:11:26ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872025-03-011435510.3390/h14030055<i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic AdaptationXingyu Lin0Department of English, School of Foreign Studies, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, ChinaPremiered at the 2024 Adelaide Festival, <i>Is This the Gate?</i> is an opera excerpt composed by Nicholas Lens and set to a libretto written by J. M. Coetzee. It is adapted from the last section of Coetzee’s novel <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> (2003), revolving around the eponymous character’s trial before the gate in the afterworld. This article explores the literary, musical and dramaturgical elements of <i>Is This the Gate</i>? and contends that the adaptation, despite its brevity and incompleteness, indexes and reworks some of the most important intertexts, localities and motifs that connect Coetzee’s early and late works. Allusions to Kafka and Dante frame the scenario for Costello in limbo—a state mirroring a writer’s late-in-life predicament—while references to Australia’s weather and fauna reflect Coetzee’s relationship to his South African roots and adopted home. Further, Costello’s conviction that she is “a secretary of the invisible” holds clues to Coetzee’s deployment of voices and fictional personae since his debut, <i>Dusklands</i> (1974). The last few acts of the opera excerpt evoke themes of desire and mortality that chime with Coetzee’s other Costello narratives, including his latest collection, <i>The Pole and Other Stories</i> (2023). The adaptation ends with Costello’s declaration of her subjectivity, which suggests a writer’s yearning and resolution to go beyond the threshold of life and death.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/3/55J. M. CoetzeeNicholas Lens<i>Elizabeth Costello</i>operaadaptation
spellingShingle Xingyu Lin
<i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
Humanities
J. M. Coetzee
Nicholas Lens
<i>Elizabeth Costello</i>
opera
adaptation
title <i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
title_full <i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
title_fullStr <i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
title_full_unstemmed <i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
title_short <i>Is This the Gate?</i>: J. M. Coetzee’s <i>Elizabeth Costello</i> and Its Operatic Adaptation
title_sort i is this the gate i j m coetzee s i elizabeth costello i and its operatic adaptation
topic J. M. Coetzee
Nicholas Lens
<i>Elizabeth Costello</i>
opera
adaptation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/3/55
work_keys_str_mv AT xingyulin iisthisthegateijmcoetzeesielizabethcostelloianditsoperaticadaptation