Le Monde Creole (The Creole World). Coleman Warner.
by Warner, Coleman; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2004Article 29Human Relations. Publisher: Times-Picayune, 2003ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Creole dialects | Creoles | Dialectology | Ethnicity | Genealogy | Language and culture | Local history | Louisiana -- Description and travelDDC classification: 050 Summary: "However corrosive racial distinctions were in the Jim Crow South of their childhood, Metoyer, 67, and Duggan, 68, have come to appreciate the northwest Louisiana world in which they grew up as something more complex and culturally potent, a society perhaps summed up in the word 'Creole.' " (TIMES-PICAYUNE) This article examines how people of Creole heritage in Louisiana are attempting to preserve their unique ethnicity, culture and language.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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High School - old - to delete | REF SIRS 2004 Human Relations Article 29 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2004.
Originally Published: Le Monde Creole (The Creole World), April 6, 2003; pp. A1+.
"However corrosive racial distinctions were in the Jim Crow South of their childhood, Metoyer, 67, and Duggan, 68, have come to appreciate the northwest Louisiana world in which they grew up as something more complex and culturally potent, a society perhaps summed up in the word 'Creole.' " (TIMES-PICAYUNE) This article examines how people of Creole heritage in Louisiana are attempting to preserve their unique ethnicity, culture and language.
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