Damnable practises : witches, dangerous women, and music in seventeenth-century English broadside ballads / Sarah F. Williams, University of south Carolina, USA.
2015
ML286.2 .W49 2015
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Title
Damnable practises : witches, dangerous women, and music in seventeenth-century English broadside ballads / Sarah F. Williams, University of south Carolina, USA.
Author
Williams, Sarah F., author.
ISBN
9781317154891 (electronic bk.)
1317154894 (electronic bk.)
9781472420824
1472420829
9781472420848
1472420845
1317154894 (electronic bk.)
9781472420824
1472420829
9781472420848
1472420845
Published
Farnham, Surrey ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, [2015]
Copyright
©2015
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xii, 225 pages) : illustrations, music.
Call Number
ML286.2 .W49 2015
Dewey Decimal Classification
782.4/3
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-215) and index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Ipswich, MA Available via World Wide Web.
Source of Description
Description based on print version record.
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EBSCOhost
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Original 1472420845
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Online Access
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Table of 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.
"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.