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Saved by Patricia Fumerton
on January 6, 2014 at 9:41:22 pm
 

 

English 231:

Popular Print, Ballad Culture, and the Crawford Collection-1800

 

Professor: Patricia Fumerton

 

Time and Place: Thursdays, 3:30-5:45pm., Early Modern Center (SH 2510)


Office Hours: Fumerton SH 2506, Tuesdays 5:00-6:00 and by appt.

 

Website for Course: http://english231ballads2014w.pbworks.com/w/page/71171696/FrontPage

 

This course will study the evolving culture of the most published and most read of literary forms in early modern England: the broadside ballad. The goal is to understand the printed ballad within its changing aesthetic and historical contexts. In each class, we will read a sampling of ballads from the period in light of critical works that address the following topics: definition (what is a ballad?), formal features (paper and ink; woodcut illustrations), production and dissemination (authors, printers/publishers, and peddlers/chapmen), orality (music and performance), collectors and collecting processes (with a focus on the Crawford collection), and making a digital ballad archive. The course will be in many ways "hands on." We will make paper ias was done in the 16th and 17th centuries at UCSB Art Studio, work a printing press at UC-Riverside,  handle original broadside ballads and woodcuts at the Huntington Library, and both transcribe and make facsimile transcriptions for the English Broadside Ballad Archive (EBBA) in the EMC.

 


 

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