Scots folk singers and their sources : : a study of two major Scottish song collections / / Caroline Macafee.

"This book offers a detailed analysis of two major Scottish folk song collections, the Greig-Duncan Collection, and the Scots folk song material of the School of Scottish Studies Archives. This exhaustive study of song transmission includes all contributors, not only notable singers. The scatte...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature ; Volume 31
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2021]
©2021
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Series:Scottish cultural review of language and literature ; Volume 31.
Physical Description:1 online resource (231 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Figures and Tables
  • Abbreviations
  • Chapter 1 Introduction
  • 1.1 Origins of the Study
  • 1.2 A Note on Tables and Figures
  • 1.3 Estimated Dates of Birth
  • 1.4 Social Background
  • 1.5 Self-Reported Data
  • 1.6 The Benefits of a Quantitative Approach
  • Chapter 2 Weighing the Catch
  • 2.1 The Data Sources
  • 2.2 Selecting the Data
  • 2.3 Approaches to the Data: Transmission
  • 2.4 Approaches to the Data: Chronology
  • 2.5 Ballad Fragments: Definition
  • 2.6 Outline of the Contributors, and a Note on the Reliability of Estimated Dates
  • Chapter 3 Did Greig and Duncan Neglect the Travellers?
  • 3.1 The Fog of Euphemism
  • 3.2 The Supposed Neglect
  • 3.3 Travellers in Greig-Duncan
  • 3.4 A Very Small Fraction of the Population
  • 3.5 Traveller Songs
  • 3.6 The Traveller and G‑D Repertoires: Two Exercises in Comparison
  • 3.7 The Traveller Mystique
  • Chapter 4 Song Transmission
  • 4.1 Historical Stages of Song Transmission
  • 4.2 Outline of the Data and a Note on Selection
  • 4.3 Categories of Song Transmission Information
  • 4.4 Inter-Personal Transmission
  • 4.4.1 The Predominance of General Population Males as Non-family Sources
  • 4.4.2 The Relative Lack of Non-family Transmission from the Travellers to the General Population
  • 4.4.3 The Female Preference for Family and Female Sources
  • 4.4.4 The Male General Population and Male G‑D Preference for Non-family Sources
  • 4.4.5 The Traveller Preference (Both Sexes) for Family Sources
  • 4.4.6 Same-Sex and Opposite-Sex Transmission Pairs within the Family
  • 4.5 The Travellers Embedded in a Literate Society
  • Chapter 5 The Reticence of Female Singers
  • 5.1 Older and Younger Women
  • 5.2 (Older) Women and the Child Ballads
  • 5.2.1 The Established Association between Women and the Big Ballads
  • 5.2.2 The Contribution of Females in the Child Ballad Data.
  • 5.2.3 Decline in the Female Contribution over Time
  • 5.3 Sex and Age Patterns in Non-family Song Transmission
  • 5.3.1 Sources and Recipients in Non-family Transmission
  • 5.3.2 The Ages of Source Individuals
  • 5.4 Domestic and Non-domestic Spheres
  • Chapter 6 The Devolution of the Child Ballads to the Travellers
  • 6.1 The 'Child Ballad' - a Valid Concept?
  • 6.2 Combining the G‑D and SSSA Data - a Valid Approach?
  • 6.3 Decline in Child Ballad Contributors and Contributions
  • 6.4 G‑D as a Baseline
  • 6.5 Age Gap between Contributors and Sources
  • 6.6 Narrowing Ballad Repertoire
  • 6.7 Transmission is Increasingly Family-Dominated
  • 6.8 Greater Retention amongst the Travellers
  • 6.9 The Cultural Context of Ballad Singing
  • 6.10 The Performance Context of Ballad Singing
  • Chapter 7 Social Change and Education versus Tradition
  • 7.1 Demography of the Contributors
  • 7.2 The 1840s Birth Cohort
  • 7.3 Education and the Regional Culture of the North-East
  • 7.4 The Demographic Transition Model
  • 7.5 Extended Family Song Transmission
  • 7.6 Rural Society in Flux
  • Chapter 8 The Missing Singers of the 1920s
  • 8.1 A Bimodal Distribution
  • 8.2 Is the 1920s Dip Merely a Coincidence?
  • 8.3 Singing at Work and Play versus Recorded and Broadcast Music
  • 8.4 The Decline of Traditional Singing amongst the Travellers
  • 8.5 The Folk Revival
  • Chapter 9 Conclusions
  • 9.1 Issues and Themes
  • 9.2 Summary of Main Findings
  • 9.3 Group Portraits
  • 9.3.1 Greig-Duncan
  • 9.3.2 The Travellers
  • 9.3.3 The General (Including Core) Population
  • 9.3.4 The Folk Revival Contributors
  • 9.4 Timeline
  • 9.5 Directions for Future Research
  • Appendix A Additional Tables
  • Appendix B Notes on the Selection of Greig-Duncan Data
  • Bibliography
  • Index.