Ring, Ring de Banjo is a minstrel song written in 1851. The song's words and music are from Stephen Foster.
| "Ring, Ring de Banjo" | |
|---|---|
| Song | |
| Published | 1851 |
| Songwriter(s) | Stephen Foster |
The song, written to mimic the dialect of Black people in the Southern United States, is about a newly-freed slave who wishes to come back to his master's plantation. As his old master is dying, the singer plays the banjo on his old master's deathbed until he dies.[1] It is one of "minstrelsy's most explicit evocations of the potentially violent relationship in slavery between master and slave"[2] and inspired a number of imitators, including the abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe.[3]
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