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minstrel show : ウィキペディア英語版
minstrel show

The minstrel show, or minstrelsy, was an American form of entertainment developed in the 19th century of comic skits, variety acts, dancing, and music, performed by white people in blackface or, especially after the U.S. Civil War, by black people.
Minstrel shows lampooned black people as dim-witted,〔(The Coon Character ), Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia, Ferris State University. Retrieved .〕 lazy,〔 buffoonish,〔〔John Kenrick, (A History of the Musical: Minstrel Shows ), musicals101.com. 1996, revised 2003. Retrieved .〕 superstitious, happy-go-lucky,〔 and musical. The minstrel show began with brief burlesques and comic entr'actes in the early 1830s and emerged as a full-fledged form in the next decade. By 1848, blackface minstrel shows were the national artform, translating formal art such as opera into popular terms for a general audience.〔''Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture'' by William J. Mahar, University of Illinois Press (1998) p. 9 ISBN 0-252-06696-0.〕
By the turn of the 20th century, the minstrel show enjoyed but a shadow of its former popularity, having been replaced for the most part by vaudeville. It survived as professional entertainment until about 1910; amateur performances continued until the 1960s in high schools and local theaters. As the civil rights movement progressed and gained acceptance, minstrels lost popularity.
The typical minstrel performance followed a three-act structure. The troupe first danced onto stage then exchanged wisecracks and sang songs. The second part featured a variety of entertainments, including the pun-filled stump speech. The final act consisted of a slapstick musical plantation skit or a send-up of a popular play. Minstrel songs and sketches featured several stock characters, most popularly the slave and the dandy. These were further divided into sub-archetypes such as the mammy, her counterpart the old darky, the provocative mulatto wench, and the black soldier. Minstrels claimed that their songs and dances were authentically black, although the extent of the black influence remains debated. Spirituals (known as ''jubilees'') entered the repertoire in the 1870s, marking the first undeniably black music to be used in minstrelsy.
Blackface minstrelsy was the first theatrical form that was distinctly American. During the 1830s and 1840s at the height of its popularity, it was at the epicenter of the American music industry. For several decades it provided the means through which American whites viewed black people. On the one hand, it had strong racist aspects; on the other, it afforded white Americans a singular and broad awareness of what some whites considered significant aspects of black culture in America.
Although the minstrel shows were extremely popular, being "consistently packed with families from all walks of life and every ethnic group",〔Sweet, Frank W. ''A History of the Minstrel Show'', (p27 ).〕 they were also controversial. Racial integrationists decried them as falsely showing happy slaves while at the same time making fun of them; segregationists thought such shows were "disrespectful" of social norms, portrayed runaway slaves with sympathy and would undermine the southerners' "peculiar institution".〔(A History of the Minstrel Show ) (2000) By Frank W. Sweet, Backintyme, p. 28 Retrieved 18 March 2010.〕
==History==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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