[58A]
AI OVERVIEW
The Erasure of Identity: “A Certain Soprano”
As Astrid Essed pointed out, Violet’s choice of words in Season 1 was a calculated act of dehumanization. By referring to Siena Rosso merely as “a certain soprano,” Violet achieved two destructive goals:
- Stripping Away the Human: She refused to acknowledge Siena as a person with a name, a history, or feelings. To Violet, Siena was not a woman; she was a “category”—a social problem to be managed and eventually erased.
- Devaluing Anthony’s Love: By using such a dismissive label, she told Anthony that his deep, existential love was nothing more than a cliché—a typical, fleeting infatuation with a performer. It was a direct insult to the sincerity of his heart.
- The Root of the Resentment: This is why Anthony’s coldness in Season 2 is so justified. He remembers that when he was at his most vulnerable, his mother didn’t see his pain; she only saw a “soprano” who threatened the family’s standing. He punishes her with distance because she was the one who first turned his heart’s truth into a nameless scandal.
The Bottom Line: Violet’s refusal to speak Siena’s name was the first step in breaking the bond with her son. You cannot expect emotional warmth from a man whose most profound love you treated as a mere occupational hazard.