John Laudun
John Laudun | |
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Born | Lafayette, Louisiana, United States |
Education |
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Alma mater | |
Known for | folklorist |
Children | 1 |
Awards |
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Website | johnlaudun |
John Laudun is a folklorist, essayist, and professor at University of Louisiana at Lafayette.[1][2]
He focuses on creativity across a broad range of media and behaviors. He has published widely in scholarly journals, anthologies, and has a book forthcoming, but he has also reached out to broader audiences with essays in various outlets, including his own website.[3] He has appeared on camera in several films and been interviewed by the New York Times and the Atlanta Constitution, among others.
Education and career
[edit]Born in Lafayette, Louisiana and raised in Lafayette, Franklin, and Baton Rouge, he graduated from Louisiana State University with a dual degree in philosophy and English in 1986. He received a master's of art in English from Syracuse University in 1989, where he developed his interest in folklore studies based on his reading of post-structuralist theories. Laudun obtained a doctorate in folkloristics from Indiana University Bloomington in 1999, where he studied under Richard Bauman and Henry Glassie.
As he was finishing up work on his dissertation, he was offered a position at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, where he joined the English faculty, where he embarked upon a number of efforts, including editing the Louisiana Folklore Miscellany, published by the Louisiana Folklore Society,[4] from 2000 to 2005.[5]
Honors and awards
[edit]While finishing up his undergraduate work at Louisiana State University, Laudun received a Jacob K. Javits Fellowship from the U.S. Department of Education to pursue graduate work in creativity. He was a Javits Fellow at both Syracuse University (1987–89) and Indiana University (1990–92). While at Syracuse, he received the Delmore Schwartz Prize for Poetry. At Indiana University, he was selected as a MacArthur Scholar for the Indiana Center for Global Change and World Peace.[6]
Publications
[edit]Books
[edit]The Amazing Crawfish Boat (University Press of Mississippi, 2016) tells the story of how a bunch of Cajun and German farmers and fabricators invented a traditional amphibious boat.
Scholarly Essays
[edit]2019. TED Talks as Data. Journal of Cultural Analytics. https://culturalanalytics.org/2019/07/ted-talks-as-data/[permanent dead link ]
2019. Trucks under Water: A Legend from the 2016 Flood. Louisiana Folklore Miscellany 28: pages 20–36.
2018. Tallying Treasure Tales: A Reconsideration of the Structure and Nature of Local Legends. Contemporary Legend 3(7): pages 1-27.
2014. Counting Tales: Towards a Computational Approach to Folk Narrative. Folk Culture Forum 5/228: pages 20–35. Translator (to Chinese): An Deming.
--- and Jonathan Goodwin. 2013. Computing Folklore Studies. Mapping over a Century of Scholarly Production through Topics. Journal of American Folklore Volume 126, Number 502 (Autumn 2013), pages 455–475.
2012. "Talking Shit" in Rayne: How Aesthetic Features Reveal Ethical Structures. Journal of American Folklore Volume 125, Number 497 (Summer 2012), pp. 304–326.[7]
2011. A Constellation of Stars: The Study of Creativity on a Human Scale, or How a Bunch of Cajun and German Farmers and Fabricators in Louisiana Invented a Traditional Amphibious Boat. In The Individual in Tradition. Eds. Ray Cashman, Tom Mould, Pravina Shukla. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
2008. Gumbo This: The State of a Dish, in Acadians and Cajuns: The Politics and Culture of French Minorities in North America, pages 160–175. Ed. Ursula Mathis-Moser and Günter Bischof. Innsbruck, Austria: Innsbruck University Press.
2004. Reading Hurston Writing. African American Review 38(1): pages 45–60.
2001. Talk about the Past in a Midwestern Town: "It Was There At That Time." Midwestern Folklore 27(2): pages 41–54.
2000. "There's Not Much to Talk about When You’re Taking Pictures of Houses": The Poetics of Vernacular Spaces. Southern Folklore 57(2): pages 135-158.
Media Appearances
[edit]- 2006 - Louisiana Story (Laudun is one of three narrators and appears in the film).
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ "UL Lafayette: English Department: Faculty&Staff: John Laudun". Archived from the original on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
- ^ "UL-Lafayette Folklore Faculty Home Pages: John Laudun". Archived from the original on 2012-04-14. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
- ^ "Home". johnlaudun.org.
- ^ "Louisiana Folklife Program: Louisiana Folklore Society".
- ^ "Folk Belief and Healing: Introductory Remarks on this Issue".
- ^ "Center for Louisiana Studies".
- ^ Laudun (2012). ""Talking Shit" in Rayne: How Aesthetic Features Reveal Ethical Structures". The Journal of American Folklore. 125 (497): 304–326. doi:10.5406/jamerfolk.125.497.0304. S2CID 161856135.