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THE ARCHIVES
OF CAJUN & CREOLE FOLKLORE

 

The Louisiana Digital Folklore Archive is the name given all collections housed between the Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism and the Center for Louisiana Studies. Within this collection are several components, the largest of which is the Archives of Cajun and Creole Folklore. Begun in 1974, the collection is the most comprehensive repository of recorded and transcribed materials on French in Louisiana, as well as the Upper Mississippi River Valley, French Canada, the West Indies, and Africa.

 

ACQUISITIONS

COLLECTIONS

LOUISIANA FOLK MASTERS™ SERIES

DIGITIZATION PROCESS

USER & REPRODUCTION POLICIES

ARCHIVE AID

FURTHER RESEARCH

ACCESS THE ARCHIVES

The archive represents the collection and preservation activities of several generations of folklorists, ethnomusicologists, linguists, and other cultural resource management professionals. The oldest recordings contained in the collection are on wax cylinders, and many music and oral history interviews were originally recorded on reel-to-reel tape. Materials cover folktales, legends, ballads, dance tunes, oral history, and popular culture. Collections include those of Barry Jean Ancelet, Elizabeth Brandon, Carl A. Brasseaux, Joseph Medard Carriere, Donald Hebert, Otis Hebert, Catherine Joliecoeur, John Laudun, Alan Lomax, Sylvie Marchand, Harry Oster, William Owens, Harry Prochon, Helena Putnam, Patricia Rickels, Ralph Rinzler, Corinne Saucier, Wiskes and Crutcher, and various student recordings. The Archives of Cajun and Creole Folklore evolved from modest beginnings and has become the premier oral history and recorded music collection in Southwest Louisiana. It continues to grow with each new generation of students, who add to the collections.

The archive is currently undergoing an extensive cataloging and database management process as well as digitization of all recordings. Due to the library's recent renovation, many recordings detriorated rapidly, and those materials most at risk are the primary focus of digitization and cataloging. For more information on the digitization program, click here.

The archive is accessible to researchers during regular hours of operation and by special appointment. The center has four listening carrels available equipped with computers, ethernet connections, and speakers/headphones.

The Archive is housed within the center's offices on the third floor of Edith Garland Dupré Library on UL-Lafayette's campus. The center is open Monday through Thursday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Friday 9:00 a.m. to by appointment. Please call 337.482.1320 for further information.

For more information on how to support the archives, please click here.

 

 

 
 
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