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2006 | 97 | 3 | 123-134

Article title

CHRISTMAS CAROL NOW AND BEFORE. ON THE PROBLEMS OF SEMANTICS OF GENRE TERMS

Title variants

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
The article presents two main problems of the term 'Christmas carol' - its etymology and a rich designation in a diachronic perspective. A Christmas carol is a religious song, often having a strong secular influence, thematically connected with Christmas, and sung from December, 24th to February, 2nd. Earlier, the term was also used to denote e.g. 'a gift given to carolers', 'a servant's advance', 'a dowry', and 'money paid to the landlord during Christmas'. Presently, its semantic range has been narrowed to refer to the religious song in question, a Christmas pastoral's visit, and a tradition of walking around with a crib. Christmas songs were composed yet in early middle ages, but only in 16th-17th century they came to be called carols. In the following part of the paper the authoress lists the terms used interchangeably with a Christmas song: rotula, canticle, carol. The last was preserved till the present day to refer to songs with extended shepherds' scene.

Year

Volume

97

Issue

3

Pages

123-134

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • A. Luto-Kaminska, Instytut Badan Literackich PAN, Pracownia Polszczyzny XVIw. ul. Piekary 8, 87-100 Torun, Poland

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
06PLAAAA01553399

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.225d20db-2977-3c64-8168-dcdcc0df9f4e
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