Carl Anthony Brasseaux | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Opelousas, Louisiana, U.S. [1] | August 19, 1951
Other names | Antoine Bourque |
Children | Ryan André Brasseaux [2] |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Historian |
Sub-discipline | History of French Colonial North America,francophone Louisiana history |
Institutions | University of Louisiana at Lafayette |
Carl Anthony Brasseaux (pseudonym:Antoine Bourque;born August 19,1951) [1] [3] is an American historian and educator. He specialized in French Colonial North America,particularly of Louisiana and the Cajun people. He helped to pioneer the field of Cajun history,and his published works on this topic represent the first serious,in-depth examination of the history of the ethnic group.
He taught at University of Louisiana at Lafayette,from 1975 until 2010. [4]
Brasseaux was born on August 19,1951,in Opelousas,the seat of St. Landry Parish,in southern Louisiana. [1] He is Cajun [5] and grew up in the town of Sunset,Louisiana.
He received both his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (then named the University of Southwestern Louisiana). He obtained his doctorate in North American studies at the Paris Diderot University. [6] [4]
Brasseaux served at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette from 1975 until 2010; [3] [4] where his roles at the university included the assistant director of Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism,from 1975 to 2001,and as director from 2001 to 2010;as the curator of colonial records collection from 1980 to 2010;an adjunct assistant professor from 1987 to 1990;assistant professor from 1990 to 1998;and a professor of history from 1998 to 2010. [3]
At the Center for Louisiana Studies,Brasseaux was involved with Louisiana Digital Folklore Archive. This large collection includes the Center for Acadian and Creole Folklore,which is regarded as the largest compilation of media resources pertaining to these two south Louisiana ethnic groups.
In 1991,the French government awarded Brasseaux the title of Chevalier in the Order des Palmes Académiques ,an honor reserved for those whose scholarly pursuits are deemed to contribute significantly to French culture.
Brasseaux received the 2003 Louisiana Writer Award for his enduring contribution to the "literary intellectual heritage of Louisiana." [7] [8] The award was presented to him by then Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Blanco,on November 8,2003,at a ceremony held at the 2nd annual Louisiana Book Festival in Baton Rouge.
Brasseaux has published more than 30 books,many of which are history-related and he has written fiction under the pseudonym Antoine Bourque,including:
The Cajuns, also known as Louisiana Acadians, are a Louisiana French ethnicity mainly found in the U.S. state of Louisiana.
Evangeline Parish is a parish located in the U.S. state of Louisiana. As of the 2020 census, the population was 32,350. The parish seat is Ville Platte.
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Acadiana, also known as the Cajun Country, is the official name given to the French Louisiana region that has historically contained much of the state's Francophone population.
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Elemore Morgan Jr. was an American painter, photographer, and educator. He was recognized in the Southern United States as a leading contemporary landscape artist. He was a professor of art at University of Louisiana at Lafayette, from 1965 until 1998. His paintings of rice farms in Vermilion Parish have been widely exhibited, from Paris to Los Angeles.
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Glenn Russell Conrad was an American historian, professor, and author. He is known for his research of south Louisiana culture, as well as an expert on archival studies, nineteenth-century European history, and the history of colonial Louisiana. He taught at Southern Colorado State and the University of Southwestern Louisiana from 1958 until 1991, and serving as the director of the Center of Louisiana Studies at University of Southern Louisiana from 1973 until 1993.
Joseph Falcón was an accordion player from southwest Louisiana, best known for producing the first recording of a Cajun song, "Allons à Lafayette," in 1928. He and his wife Cléoma Breaux left for New Orleans to record the first Cajun record and went on to perform across southern Louisiana and Texas.
Cajun music has its roots based in the ballads of the French-speaking Acadians of Canada, and in country music.
Ryan André Brasseaux is an American scholar of vernacular American music and an education administrator. He has served as the Dean of Davenport College at Yale University since 2011. He is an expert on the history of Cajun music, and a frequent collaborator with the Lost Bayou Ramblers.
Attakapas Parish, a former parish (county) in southern Louisiana, was one of the twelve parishes in the Territory of Orleans, newly defined by the United States federal government following its Louisiana Purchase in 1803. At its core was the Poste des Attakapas trading post, which developed as the current city of St. Martinville.
Jean Duet "Dewey" Segura was an American folk musician. He and his brother Edier Segura formed the duo known as the "Segura Brothers". The duo created some of the earliest Cajun music in the late 1920s.
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Louisiana French is an umbrella term for the dialects and varieties of the French language spoken traditionally by French Louisianians in colonial Lower Louisiana. As of today Louisiana French is primarily used in the state of Louisiana, specifically in its southern parishes.
Inez Catalon was an American Creole ballad singer, who was one of the most well-known performers of the genre known as Louisiana "home music". These are a cappella versions of ballads and love songs, drinking songs, game songs, lullabies and waltzes performed by women in the home, passed down from earlier generations to provide entertainment for the family before radio and television existed. Home music is not considered part of the public performance repertoire of Cajun and zydeco music because the songs were sung in the home by women, rather than in the dance halls of southwestern Louisiana which featured almost exclusively male performers.