What to Do With … Folklore? What to Do … with Ballads? Revisiting “Mrs Brown of Falkland”

Authors

  • Sigrid Rieuwerts Department of English and Linguistics (British Studies) University of Edinburgh 27 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LD, Scotland Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz Jakob Welder-Weg 18, D-55099 Mainz, Germany

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3986/Traditio2011400302

Keywords:

ballads, research methodology, orality, Mrs Brown of Falkland // balade, raziskovalna metodologija, ustnost, gospa Brown iz Falklanda

Abstract

With one of the oldest and most important ballad repertoires in English now published, I would like to revisit the singer Mrs Brown of Falkland (1747-1810) and discuss what is involved in studying ballads in general and her ballads in particular.

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Z enim najstarejših in najpomembnejših doslej izdanih angleških baladnih repertoarjev bi se rada vnovič vrnila k pevki gospe Brownovi s Falklanda (1747–1810) in razpravljala o tem, kaj vključuje študij balad na spološno in kaj v posameznostih.

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References

Braungart, Wolfgang. 1996. ‘Aus denen Kehlen der ältsten Müttergens’. Über Kitsch und Trivialität, populäre Kultur und Elitekultur, Mündlichkeit und Schriftlichkeit der Volksballade, besonders bei Herder und Goethe. Jahrbuch für Volksliedforschung 41: 11–32.

Bronson, Bertrand H. 1969. Mrs Brown and the Ballad. In: The Ballad as Song. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1969, 64–78.

Brown A: Popular Ballads, written from Recitation, by Jamieson, with some relative letters, 4to. David Laing Papers (Edinburgh University Library La.III.473).

Brown B: William Tytler Brown Manuscript (National Library of Scotland Acc. 10611.1).

Brown C: Alexander Fraser Tytler Brown Manuscript (National Library of Scotland Acc. 10611.2).

Buchan, David. 1972. The Ballad and the Folk. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Child, Francis James. 1873. Old Ballads. Prof. Child’s Appeal. Notes and Queries Ser. 4, Vol. 11 (4 January): 12.

Child, Francis James (ed.). 1882–1898. The English and Scottish Popular Ballads. 5 vols. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co.

Fowler, David C. 1958. An Accused Queen in ‘The Lass of Roch Royal’ (Child 76). Journal of American Folklore 71: 553–563.

Jamieson, Robert. 1806. Popular Ballads and Songs, from Tradition, Manuscripts, and Scarce Editions; with Translations of Similar Pieces from the Ancient Danish Language, and a Few Originals By the Editor. 2 vols. Edinburgh: Archibald Constable.

Motherwell, William. 1827. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern. Glasgow: J. Wylie.

Pettitt, Thomas. 1984. Mrs. Brown’s ‘Lass of Roch Royal’ and the Golden Age of Scottish Balladry. Jahrbuch für Volksliedforschung 29: 13–31.

Rieuwerts, Sigrid. 2002. Women as the chief preservers of traditional ballad poetry. Acta Ethnographica Hungarica 47: 149–159.

Rieuwerts, Sigrid. 2006. Kulturnarratologie: Die Geschichte einer Geschichte. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier (MUSE 10).

Rieuwerts, Sigrid. 2007. Same Story – Different Fashion: An Apology for Variants. In: Emily Lyle: The Persistent Scholar (Ed. Fisher, Frances J. and Sigrid Rieuwerts). Trier: WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier (BASIS 5), 241–257.

Rieuwerts, Sigrid (ed.). 2011. The Ballad Repertoire of Anna Gordon, Mrs Brown of Falkland. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer (The Scottish Text Society Fifth Series; no. 8).

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Published

15.12.2011

How to Cite

Rieuwerts, S. (2011). What to Do With … Folklore? What to Do … with Ballads? Revisiting “Mrs Brown of Falkland”. Traditiones, 40(3), 17–26. https://doi.org/10.3986/Traditio2011400302

Issue

Section

Real and Virtual Spaces of Folklore Studies / Realni in virtualni prostori folkloristike