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Ballads Narrative songs
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Medieval Ballads
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Most common people could not read or write
Medieval Period Most common people could not read or write Minstrels traveled singing these ballads (narratives) to entertain
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Narratives were about ordinary people
Medieval Period Narratives were about ordinary people Because they were orally given many versions of the same story are told
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Definition Narrative songs handed down in oral tradition
From French word meaning “dance song”
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Characteristics ◊ Simple and direct - stresses a single incident; begins in the midst of the incident ◊ Little or no background information ◊ Tells a story developed through dialogue ◊ Tells of dramatic events of ordinary people or legendary heroes ◊ Performed for an audience
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Types ◊ Folk Ballad - oldest type; composed by local bard to remember important event ◊ Story most important ◊ Tone is tragic ◊ Ends in death by accident, murder, suicide, or return of the dead ◊ Use of repetition - adds to melody, provides emphasis, heightens emotional effect ◊ Some well known traditional folk ballads include “Lord Randall,” “The Three Ravens, and “Get up and Bar the Door.”
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Types ◊ Minstrel Ballad
◊ Used themes of folk ballads and added descriptions of settings and characters’ feelings ◊ Longer than folk ballad ◊ Less direct than folk ballad ◊ More literary than folk ballad ◊ A well known minstrel ballad is “Sir Patrick Spens/Spence.”
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Ballad Headlines THREE DEAD SONS VISIT MOTHER FOR DINNER
SLIGHTED WOMAN SPURNS LOVER’S DEATHBED REQUEST
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Ballad Headlines MAIDEN HEADED FOR GALLOWS; FAMILY REFUSES HELP
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Subjects ◊ Quarrels among family members or lovers or friends ◊ Death
◊ War ◊ Fear of the unknown ◊ Lives of people ◊ Adventures of outlaws ◊ Tragic love
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Themes Domestic tragedy False love True love
Absurdity of husband/wife relations
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Themes ◊ The supernatural ◊ Courage ◊ Death ◊ Revenge ◊ Envy
◊ Rebellion ◊ Betrayal ◊ Remorse ◊ Loyalty ◊ Patriotism
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Most of the ballads remained anonymous
Medieval Period Most of the ballads remained anonymous Songs were not written down until the 18th century
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Ballads Typically focused on a single incident
Begins in the middle of the crisis Proceeds directly to the resolution
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Ballads Not developed characters Not developed background
Not developed description
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Ballads - Subjects Tragic love Domestic Conflict Crime War Shipwrecks
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Ballads - Subjects Comic treatments Tragic treatments
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How to read a ballad Read silently looking at side notes
Paraphrase each stanza Read aloud to hear the sounds
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Song Characteristics ◊ Four-line stanzas ◊ Rhyme in lines 2 and 4 ◊ Repetition of words, phrases, and lines ◊ Refrains
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The Refrain Songs chorus
Probable that the singer of the ballad had the audience join in the refrain
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The Refrain Rhythm Theme
Allowed the singer to improvise/remember the next verse
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Assignment Read both ballads – “Barbara Allan”– “Get Up and Bar the Door”
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Assignment Break up into groups A ballad will be assigned to you
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Assignment Annotate the poems - determine meaning, theme, speakers, etc. Create a newspaper headline – National Enquirer Write a newspaper article
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Assignment Type article and headline Share with class
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