Abstract
The folk music movement was among the most important influences on English cultural
life in the years immediately before 1914. Its major figure, both in terms of volume of material collected
and published, and in terms of organization and publicity, was Cecil Sharp. Historical understanding
of the movement and modern appreciation of the material have been hampered by a Marxist orthodoxy
which sees folk music as the cultural property of the working class and which attempts to discredit the
folk music collectors, particularly Sharp. This article summarizes the trends in scholarship and
employs the first biographical survey of a large group of folk singers to challenge the Marxist
interpretation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
15 articles.
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