Home  |  Search help  |  Classification Scheme   |   Leslie Shepard   |   Zotero

Damnable practises : witches, dangerous women, and music in seventeenth-century English broadside ballads / Sarah F. Williams.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Farnham, Surrey : Ashgate. 2015.Description: xii, 225 p. : ill., music ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781472420824 (hbk.) :
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23
Contents:
Witches, Catholics, scolds, and wives: noisy women in context -- "The hanging tune": feminizing and stigmatizing broadside trade melodies -- "A swearing and blaspheming wretch": acoustic disorder and verbal excess in ballad texts -- "Auditories are like fairies": hearing, seeing, selling, and singing ballads -- Conclusion: "chronicled in ditty": ephemera, permanence, and the broadside ballad's legacy into the eighteenth century.
Holdings
Item type Home library Class number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Books Books VWML MP 40.3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Reference only 19035

Select bibliography: p. 189-215.

Witches, Catholics, scolds, and wives: noisy women in context -- "The hanging tune": feminizing and stigmatizing broadside trade melodies -- "A swearing and blaspheming wretch": acoustic disorder and verbal excess in ballad texts -- "Auditories are like fairies": hearing, seeing, selling, and singing ballads -- Conclusion: "chronicled in ditty": ephemera, permanence, and the broadside ballad's legacy into the eighteenth century.

Share

Powered by Koha