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North
Louisiana Folklife Traditions and Research: An Overview
By Susan Roach
Often people unfamiliar with
Louisiana stereotypically consider the whole state to be made
up of French-speaking Cajuns, Catholics, and swamps; however,
this misconception overlooks the fact that Louisiana is divided
geographically, ethnically, and philosophically into two regions.
Predominantly Protestant, North Louisiana is culturally part
of the upland and riverine U. S. South. Scholars have suggested
a number of boundaries between south and North Louisiana, using
various mappable cultural traits such as French/English differences,
Catholic/Protestant religious differences, liberal/conservative
voting preferences, and differences in material culture such
as housing. This boundary begins in the southwest corner of the
state, where the Sabine River empties into the Gulf, and runs
northeast to the point where the thirty-first parallel crosses
the Mississippi (in northern Avoyelles Parish) and then runs
southeast through the mouth of the Mississippi.
North Louisiana's mainly
rural folk landscape was shaped by contacts among Indians, Anglo-
and African Americans, in pioneer, plantation, sharecropping,
and small farm settings in the river bottomlands, piney woods,
and hills of the region. In addition, other cultural groups in
the area include Creoles of color in the Cane River area below
Natchitoches, Spanish-speaking people of partial Choctaw descent
who live on the Texas/Louisiana border, and Italians, Hungarians,
Czechs, and others. Scholars have likened the area to a strip
quilt made up of many separate, textured pieces.
Interestingly, while many
people think that the northern region of the state is not culturally
important, in actuality, research is finding it to be the most
traditional part of the state. Since the establishment of the
Louisiana Folklife Program in the Louisiana Division of the Arts
in 1978, projects focusing on folk traditions in North Louisiana
reveal viable traditions ranging from music such as old-time
country fiddling, blues, and gospel; to crafts such as white-oak
basketry, quilting, and hoop net-making; to foodways such as
cooking cornbread and butterbeans, canning mayhaw jelly, and
curing pork.
Research by folklorists on
these folk traditions in different areas of North Louisiana has
resulted in exhibitions, record albums, festivals, and publications.
Scholars often see these attempts at identifying, preserving,
and presenting folk traditions as cultural intervention because
these projects not only conserve such traditions but also, in
turn, may influence those very traditions which they have documented.
In recent years agencies
and scholars on both the regional and state levels have been
working to provide documentation of North Louisiana folk culture.
The longest running has been the Louisiana Folklife Center at
Northwestern State University in Natchitoches. Under the direction
of Donald Hatley, the center conducted and archived research
on the northern part of the state and has presented the results
of this research at the popular Natchitoches Folk Festival held
annually the second weekend in July since 1980. The center has
jointly produced a Saturday night radio program on Louisiana
folk music with national public radio affiliate KDAQ in Shreveport.
The Folklife Center has also jointly produced several records
with documentary notes with the Louisiana Folklife Program. The
first, Cornbread for Your Husband and Biscuits for Your Man":
Mr. Clifford Blake Calls the Cotton Press, (1980) provides
rare documentation of the black traditions of press calls, blues,
gospel, and animal and slave tales performed by Natchitoches
Paris-born Blake, who subsequently was featured in state and
national festivals and the CBS Evening News. The center's second
record, The North Louisiana String Band, features the
British American tradition of old-time country string band music
with fiddle, guitar, mandolin, bass, and vocals. By putting the
state program in touch with bandleader Troy DeRamus, who was
the producer of the Louisiana Fiddling Championship at Boyce,
La., this project also laid the foundation for the transfer of
the fiddling contest to the Office of State Parks, which has
also brought together more north and South Louisiana fiddlers
and stimulated more interest in fiddling. The Center's third
jointly-produced record, Since Ol' Gabriel's Time: Hezekiah
and the Houserockers, provided important documentation of
the rich delta blues tradition. The richness and importance of
this music was an impetus for more research being conducted by
Susan Roach and H. F. Gregory for the Louisiana Folklife Program
in the Delta, the regional label for the northern parishes along
the Mississippi River.
In addition to the Delta
Folklife Survey in progress, there have been surveys and exhibitions
devoted to traditions and other sub-regions in North Louisiana.
The first exclusively North Louisiana research and exhibition
of folk crafts, Doing It Right and Passing It On: North Louisiana
Folk Crafts (1981), was produced by H. F. Gregory for the Alexandria
Museum. After this exhibit, many of these artifacts were installed
in the La. state Capitol permanent exhibit, The Creole State:
An Exhibit of Louisiana Folklife. The North Central Louisiana
Folklife Project, directed by Susan Roach, surveyed the folk
traditions in a five-parish area know as the "Piney Hills"
and presented these traditions in a regional festival, an exhibition,
and a publication Gifts from the Hills (1984). This research
reveals a continuity of rural regional traditions including folk
architecture, farming and animal husbandry, farm and domestic
crafts, foodways, verbal arts and oral history, secular music,
and religious and family rituals and performances. These areas
are also the subject of research done in the Florida Parishes
Folklife Survey, directed by Joel Gardner. Although the northeastern
Florida Parishes are south of the thirty-first parallel, research
shows this area have more in common with the northern area of
the state both geographically and culturally and can be considered
part of North Louisiana. Both the folk festival held in the Hammond
and the folklife exhibition at the Cultural Center illustrate
the continuity of traditions between the Florida parishes and
the rest of North Louisiana.
By presenting folk artists
located through research, such festivals which focus on Louisiana
folklife are important in spotlighting area traditions. Perhaps
the longest running festival, the Louisiana Art and Folk Festival
in Columbia has a folk component along with contemporary arts
and historical revival crafts as does the Catahoula Lake Heritage
Festival in Pineville. Other North Louisiana festivals also mix
a few folk artists with revivalist and contemporary artists.
While the Louisiana Folklife Pavilion at the 1984 Louisiana World
Exposition in New Orleans, known as the World's Fair, featured
folk traditions from the whole state on a small scale, the 1985
Festival of American Folklife for the first time featured extensive
traditions from both north and South Louisiana in a festival
format. In the years following, the Louisiana Folklife Festival,
sponsored by the Louisiana Folklife Program, has continued this
practice.
While such festivals are
annual events, other projects featuring folk traditions operate
year round. The Pioneer Heritage Center, a living history museum
featuring regional folk architecture, is located on the Louisiana
State University campus in Shreveport, and presents folk artists
throughout the year. This center has also been responsible for
research in the Red River region.
Documentary research on folk culture has also led to
the inclusion of folk craftsmen in the Louisiana Crafts Program, a
marketing assistance program in the Louisiana Division of the Arts. The
program publication Fait à la Main: A Source Book of Louisiana
Crafts also
presented interpretative information on folk artists and stimulated
interest in traditional folk crafts among contemporary art galleries
in North Louisiana.
These types of documentation
and presentation of the regional folklife are aimed at breaking
down cultural stereotypes and misconceptions about the region
and the state and educating groups as to the value of their own
and other's traditions. Thus, such programming will hopefully
broaden public awareness, appreciation, and understanding of
the cultural diversity of the state and the importance of the
unique North Louisiana heritage.
This article first appeared
in the 1988 Louisiana Folklife Festival booklet. Dr. Susan Roach
is a folklorist with the Department of English, Louisiana Tech
University.
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