Book contents
- American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War II
- American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War II
- Copyright page
- Praise for American Song and Struggle
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Broken Spears and Songs of Sorrow
- Chapter 2 Good Newes from Virginia
- Chapter 3 A Capital Chop
- Chapter 4 If I Had but a Small Loaf of Bread
- Chapter 5 Where Today Are the Pequot?
- Chapter 6 There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood
- Chapter 7 A Tragedy That Beggared the Greek
- Chapter 8 Muscle, Blood, and Steel
- Chapter 9 Rule Anglo-Saxia
- Chapter 10 The Hand That Feeds You
- Chapter 11 We Are Many
- Chapter 12 100% American
- Chapter 13 We’re Up Against It Now
- Chapter 14 The Panic Is On
- Chapter 15 To Thee We Sing
- Conclusion
- Notes and Sources
- Song Index
- General Index
Chapter 7 - A Tragedy That Beggared the Greek
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2022
- American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War II
- American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War II
- Copyright page
- Praise for American Song and Struggle
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Broken Spears and Songs of Sorrow
- Chapter 2 Good Newes from Virginia
- Chapter 3 A Capital Chop
- Chapter 4 If I Had but a Small Loaf of Bread
- Chapter 5 Where Today Are the Pequot?
- Chapter 6 There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood
- Chapter 7 A Tragedy That Beggared the Greek
- Chapter 8 Muscle, Blood, and Steel
- Chapter 9 Rule Anglo-Saxia
- Chapter 10 The Hand That Feeds You
- Chapter 11 We Are Many
- Chapter 12 100% American
- Chapter 13 We’re Up Against It Now
- Chapter 14 The Panic Is On
- Chapter 15 To Thee We Sing
- Conclusion
- Notes and Sources
- Song Index
- General Index
Summary
Black Americans sing of their hope in the promise of Reconstruction, which is eventually betrayed as the white North and South sing their way into the “romance of reunion.” The Indigenous peoples to the west face a US government hostile to their songs and dances, Mexican vaqueros are immortalized in corridos, Chinese and Irish railroad workers are pitted against each other in minstrel songs, and the Fisk Jubilee Singers introduce the spiritual to the world (even as the Ku Klux Klan churns out its earliest sheet music). Woman suffragists and former abolitionists join hands in song; and as the country descends into the corrupt mire of a Gilded Age, Grange farmers take on the monopolies of railroad magnates and “robber barons” in songs that ring into the present century. In the Pennsylvania coal fields, the executed Molly Maguires are memorialized in powerful balladry, and the Knights of Labor provide the musical soundtrack to the greatest fight between labor and capital that the country has yet seen.
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- American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War 2A Cultural History, pp. 130 - 149Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022