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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要:从1847年开始,也就是从哈佛学院毕业一年后,弗朗西斯·詹姆斯·查尔德(Francis James Child)开始了与他最亲密的大学朋友、未来的妹夫威廉·埃勒里·塞奇威克(William Ellery Sedgwick)长达20年的通信。根据塞奇威克家族存放在马萨诸塞州历史学会的文件中的这批以前不为人知的信件,本文将研究Child自述的“秘密自传”的前五年,以了解它“讲述”了叙事诗背后的人年轻时的情感经历,努力在哈佛站稳脚跟的苦苦挣扎的学者,还不是传统民谣的赞助人。
Abstract:Beginning in 1847, a year after his graduation from Harvard College, Francis James Child, beloved Harvard professor, first president of the American Folklore Society, and perhaps the greatest ballad scholar of the nineteenth century, began what would become a twenty-year correspondence with his closest college friend and future brother-in-law, William Ellery Sedgwick. Based on this previously unknown cache of letters contained among the Sedgwick family papers deposited at the Massachusetts Historical Society, this essay will examine the first five years of Child's self-described "secret autobiography" for what it tells about the emotional experiences that shaped the man behind the ballads when he was a young, struggling academic trying to establish himself at Harvard, and not yet the patronym for traditional balladry.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Folklore Research has provided an international forum for current theory and research among scholars of traditional culture since 1964. Each issue includes topical, incisive articles of current theoretical interest to folklore and ethnomusicology as international disciplines, as well as essays that address the fieldwork experience and the intellectual history of folklore and ethnomusicology studies. Contributors include scholars and professionals in additional fields, including anthropology, area studies, communication, cultural studies, history, linguistics, literature, performance studies, religion, and semiotics.