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Perspectives on the Jack tales: and other North American Märchen
Carl Lindahl
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Frontmatter
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Foreword (page viii)
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A Tale of Verbal Economy: "Stiff Dick" (Samuel Harmon, narrator, page 1)
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Introduction: Representing and Recovering the British- and Irish-American Märchen (Carl Lindahl, page 7)
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Two Tellings of "Merrywise": 1949 and 2000 (Jane Muncy Fugate, narrator, page 39)
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Two Versions of "Rawhead and Bloodybones" from the Farmer-Muncy Family (Glen Muncy Anderson and Jane Muncy Fugate, narrators, page 55)
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Sounding a Shy Tradition: Oral and Written Styles of American Mountain Märchen (Carl Lindahl, page 68)
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Two Transcriptions of "Jack and the Bull," by Polly Johnson (James Taylor Adams and Richard Chase, transcribers, page 99)
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Storybook Style: "Jack and the Green Man" (Louise Fontaine Mann, narrator, page 106)
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Is Old Jack Really Richard Chase? (Charles L. Perdue Jr., page 111)
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A Model of Appropriate Behavior? "The Ship That Sailed on Land and Water" (Alice Lannon, narrator, page 139)
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Jack and His Masters: Real Worlds and Tale Worlds in Newfoundland Folktales (Martin Lovelace, page 149)
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In Memoriam: Herbert Halpert (Gerald Thomas, page 171)
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Abstracts (page 175)
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Contributors (page 177)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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WF | 61.3/4 (Autumn 2002): 365-367 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1500435 |
Citable Link
Published: c2001
Publisher: Indiana University Press
- 9781878318756 (paper)