1st Edition

Ballads, Songs and Snatches The Appropriation of Folk Song and Popular Culture in British 19th-Century Realist Prose

By C.M. Jackson-Houlston Copyright 1999
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    As a book on allusion, this has interest for both the traditional literary or cultural historian and for the modern student of textuality and readership positions. It focuses on allusion to folksong, and, more tangentially, to popular culture, areas which have so far been slighted by literary critics. In the nineteenth century many authors attempted to mediate the culture(s) of the working classes for the enjoyment of their predominantly middle-class audiences. In so doing they took songs out of their original social and musical contexts and employed a variety of strategies which - consciously or unconsciously - romanticised, falsified or denigrated what the novels or stories claimed to represent. In addition, some writers who were well-informed about the cultures they described used allusion to song as a covert system of reference to topics such as sexuality and the criticism of class and gender relations which it was difficult to discuss directly.

    Contents: Introduction; Scott: Scott’s audiences, knowledge and inclinations; Scott and false intertexts; Scott's use of allusion to traditional song; Scott’s Contemporaries: Galt and Hogg; Mitford; Scott’s Legacy, and Three Muscular Christians: Mid-Nineteenth-century novelists; Borrow; Kingsley; Hughes; Gaskell; Dickens and Thackeray: Some new contexts; Dickens: a withdrawal from narrative commitment; Thackeray, popular song and gender politics; Jefferies; Hardy: Hardy’s background and musical milieux; Church bands; Traditional dance and song; Conclusion; Appendices: The song sequence in Redgauntlet; Hardy's collection of 'Country Songs of 1820 Onwards’; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    C.M. Jackson-Houlston