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Ballads into Books

The Legacies of Francis James Child Selected Papers from the 26th International Ballad Conference (SIEF Ballad Commission), Swansea, Wales, 19-24 July 1996

by Tom Cheesman (Volume editor) Sigrid Rieuwerts (Volume editor)
©1999 Conference proceedings 284 Pages

Summary

Francis James Child (1825-1896) was to the traditional balladry of the English-speaking world what the Brothers Grimm were to fairytales. His edition of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882-1898) has never been superseded: it is an invaluable resource for scholars in many disciplines, as well as for singers, poets and other writers. Marking the centenary of both the scholar and his work, this volume presents authoritative new research on his editorial practice, his correspondence with key contributors in the British Isles, and the heirs to the ballad research tradition which he established. Other groups of essays debate the aesthetic distinctiveness of the «Child ballads» and interpret them in relation to wide-ranging historical and contemporary cultural contexts. Up-to-date guides to bibliographic, archival and online research resources, and a select discography, are provided for the benefit of students and others approaching traditional narrative song for the first time.

Details

Pages
284
Year
1999
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906761671
Language
English
Keywords
research correspondence discography
Published
Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., New York, Paris, Wien, 1997, 1999. 284 pp.

Biographical notes

Tom Cheesman (Volume editor) Sigrid Rieuwerts (Volume editor)

The Editors: Tom Cheesman lectures in German at the University of Wales Swansea and is the author of The Shocking Ballad Picture Show (1994). Sigrid Rieuwerts lectures in English at the Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz and is working on a major study of «The Gypsie Laddie» (Child 200). Both have published widely in the field of traditional and popular song.

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Title: Ballads into Books