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dc.contributor.authorGregory, David
dc.contributor.authorGregory, Rosaleen
dc.date.accessioned2008-07-02T05:54:07Z
dc.date.available2008-07-02T05:54:07Z
dc.date.issued2002
dc.identifier.citationGregory, David and Rosaleen Gregory. “Jewels Left in the Dung-hills: Broadside and other Vernacular Ballads Rejected by Francis Child”, Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, Vol 29 (2002), pp. 69-80 [actually published Spring 2003].en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2149/1646
dc.description.abstractAlthough The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1 882-1 898) was the most systematic and scholarly collection of vernacular ballads published in the Victorian era, Francis Child nonetheless omitted from his canon a large number of extant narrative songs, including many found on black-letter broadsides and others that he had printed in his earlier collection, English and Scottish Ballads (1 857-64). This article explores Child's changing approach to ballad editing, discusses his ambivalence towards broadsides, and examines his selective use of texts discovered by English collectors during the Late Victorian folksong revival, with a view to explaining what kinds of material he discarded and why he did so.en
dc.format.extent510141 bytes
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherCanadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienneen
dc.subjectFrancis Childen
dc.subjectBalladsen
dc.subjectfolk musicen
dc.titleJewels Left in the Dung-hills: Broadside and other Vernacular Ballads Rejected by Francis Childen
dc.typeArticleen


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