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  1. 紀要論文
  2. 学部
  3. 国際英語学部
  4. 中京英文学
  5. 6

Industrial Balladsと産業革命の進展

https://chukyo-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/9900
https://chukyo-u.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/9900
86ce40ee-a882-4846-9348-2e3ce826356d
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
KJ00004530641.pdf KJ00004530641.pdf (1.1 MB)
Item type [ELS]紀要論文 / Departmental Bulletin Paper_02(1)
公開日 2016-11-14
タイトル
タイトル Industrial Balladsと産業革命の進展
タイトル
タイトル The Industrial Revolution and its Ballads
言語 en
言語
言語 jpn
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
資源タイプ departmental bulletin paper
雑誌書誌ID
収録物識別子タイプ NCID
収録物識別子 AN00144391
著者 福吉, 瑛子

× 福吉, 瑛子

WEKO 12651

福吉, 瑛子

ja-Kana フクヨシ, エイコ

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FUKUYOSHI, EIKO

× FUKUYOSHI, EIKO

WEKO 12652

en FUKUYOSHI, EIKO

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著者所属(日)
文学部
抄録(英)
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 The purpose of this paper is to trace the process of development of the working-class people's consciousness from the beginning of the industrial revolution. I attempt it here by using very interesting but hitherto rather neglected materials, the industrial ballads. These are the songs written down and sung by working-class people such as weavers, croppers, miners, cutlers, railwaymen, dockers, sailors, calling sellers on the streets, and many other types of worker in then-flourishing industries. Their wives and children were also among those singing communities. Through ballads such as The wark o' the weavers', and 'The handloom weaver and the factory maid', we can see that the skilled labourers still held the pride in their works while their sons and daughters no longer tarry in ploughing or handloom weaving, but later both of the generations came to realize that the machines and the factories were not so attractive as seen first, but so hateful enough to be crushed and fired down as their enemies as seen in 'Foster's Mill'. After these first confrontations with the industrialization with its steam-engined machines set in the fashionable factories, people came to know that it was their masters and owners that kept them down under the worst conditions of life. The ballads such as 'Fourpence a day', 'The coalowner and the pitman's wife' and 'The blackleg miners' illustrate how they began fighting, timidly first, but later with the firmer convictions, expelling the treacherous ones from among them so as to strengthen their solidarity towards their final successes. They still fought on even to come to reveal in their songs such as The Durham lock-out' and The Gresford disaster' how cruel and greedy, hypocratic and dirty their bosses could be, their only aim being to increase their profits, sacrificing the workers' lives and peace. Lastly they came to versify satirically as in 'William Brown' in the 20th century that even those greedy bosses themselves had just been driven mad by the blind desire of capital for self-engrossment and so in turn drove their workers to 'work a little harder', only to lead to overproduction and the market's slump. As we have seen in the above industrial ballads, the British working people have developed their consciousness as the working-class, and documented their feelings and thoughts and fightings in their industrial ballads and handed them down in their singing tradition throughout their own working-class culture.
書誌情報 中京英文学
en : Chukyo English literature

巻 6, p. 73-98, 発行日 1986-03-20
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内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 7
アクセション番号
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 KJ00004530641
ISSN
収録物識別子タイプ ISSN
収録物識別子 02852039
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