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31 January, 18:27

African-American ballads of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries celebrated the exploits of bad men, such as "Stagolee." Why?

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  1. 31 January, 19:52
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    Hi

    I can say that the oral tradition of the troubadours extended the story to the murders, most of the time in real events, in which the interpreter put either in the place of the murderer, or in the place of the victim or I could say in the role of a neutral narrator. These stories were printed and began to be sold, in England, Scotland, Ireland and the Nordic countries. When Anglo-Saxon emigration began to expand throughout the United States, it achieved this oral tradition of affected ballads, later became embedded in the blues, country and folk genres and spread mainly through the old west and south of the country.
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