De Wild Goose-Nation
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"De Wild Goose-Nation" is an American song composed by blackface minstrel performer Dan Emmett.
The song is a parody (or possibly an adaptation) of "Gumbo Chaff", a blackface minstrel song dating to the 1830s; the music of most closely resembles an 1844 version of that song.[1] Musicologist Hans Nathan sees similarities in the introduction of the song to the later "Dixie".[2]
Animal characters are the song's protagonists, tying "De Wild Goose-Nation" to similar tales in African American folklore.[3] Despite the title, the phrase "wild goose nation" occurs only once, in the first verse. Some lyrics from the song are repeated in "Dixie": "De tarapin he thot it was time for to trabble / He screw aron his tail and begin to scratch grabble."[4]
Emmett published the song through the Charles Keith Company in Boston in 1844. The title page claimed that the song had been sung "with unprecedented success . . . both in Europe and America";[5] nevertheless, analysis of playbills and newspaper clippings suggests that it saw only moderate popularity.[6] Emmett dedicated the song to "'Jim Crow' Rice".
[edit] Notes
- ^ Mahar 20.
- ^ Nathan 259.
- ^ Mahar 233.
- ^ Quoted in Nathan 262.
- ^ Quoted in Mahar 373 note 37.
- ^ Mahar 234.
[edit] References
- Mahar, William J. (1999). Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
- Nathan, Hans (1962). Dan Emmett and the Rise of Early Negro Minstrelsy. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.