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Crime and Punishment in the Cape Breton Songs Contest
Author(s) -
Ian Brodie
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ethnologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1708-0401
pISSN - 1481-5974
DOI - 10.7202/1069851ar
Subject(s) - contest , lyrics , parade , cape , theme (computing) , history , entertainment , art , visual arts , sociology , literature , art history , archaeology , political science , computer science , law , operating system
Dishpan Parade , a morning women’s entertainment program, was a production of Sydney, Nova Scotia’s CJCB Radio from 1948 to 1952. Early in its run the hosts created a local song contest, rewarding lyrics on a Cape Breton theme set to known melodies. Many entrants took the opportunity to satirize current events, protected by the implied triviality of light verse. This article places two such songs—“Bootleg Coal,” set to “The Blue-Tail Fly,” and “Go Away (The County Jail)” to “Polly Waddle Doodle” — within the specific history that occasioned them and suggests the expressive and subtle subversiveness of mid-century Cape Breton women.

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