Cajun for the Troops

Cajun for the Troops
Author: A. Benton Phillips (SS)
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2011-10-10
Genre: Self-Help
ISBN: 1466900032

The Navy's newest nuclear submarine, the USS Los Angeles was in San Francisco awaiting further orders. She carried the name of famous warships of yesteryear, when naval battles were fought with wooden ships and iron sailors.

The Cajuns

The Cajuns
Author: Shane K. Bernard
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2009-09-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1496800923

The past sixty years have shaped and reshaped the group of French-speaking Louisiana people known as the Cajuns. During this period, they have become much like other Americans and yet have remained strikingly distinct. The Cajuns: Americanization of a People explores these six decades and analyzes the forces that had an impact on Louisiana's Acadiana. In the 1940s, when America entered World War II, so too did the isolated Cajuns. Cajun soldiers fought alongside troops from Brooklyn and Berkeley and absorbed aspects of new cultures. In the 1950s as rock 'n' roll and television crackled across Louisiana airwaves, Cajun music makers responded with their own distinct versions. In the 1960s, empowerment and liberation movements turned the South upside down. During the 1980s, as things Cajun became an absorbing national fad, “Cajun” became a kind of brand identity used for selling everything from swamp tours to boxed rice dinners. At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the advent of a new information age launched “Cyber-Cajuns” onto a worldwide web. All these forces have pushed and pulled at the fabric of Cajun life but have not destroyed it. A Cajun himself, the author of this book has an intense personal fascination in his people. By linking seemingly local events in the Cajuns' once isolated south Louisiana homeland to national and even global events, Bernard demonstrates that by the middle of the twentieth century the Cajuns for the first time in their ethnic story were engulfed in the currents of mainstream American life and yet continued to make outstandingly distinct contributions.

Frenchie

Frenchie
Author: Jason P. Theriot
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2024
Genre: Cajuns
ISBN: 9781959569107

"As soon as the American forces landed on the beaches of Normandy, France, in June 1944, military commanders called out for "Frenchies" to serve as interpreters with the local population. Frenchie was the name given to the young Cajun soldiers from Louisiana who, like their Acadian ancestors, grew up speaking French as their first language. The bilingual Cajuns represented the largest group of French-speaking Americans in the military-and their linguistic abilities proved invaluable to military operations around the world. Ironically, this same generation experienced ethnic discrimination growing up in a state-sanctioned English-only school system that sought to do away with the native French language. The Cajun boys and girls of the World War II generation were often punished for speaking French at school; many grew up ashamed of their language and culture. Society tended to view the Cajun dialect as a handicap, and the people who spoke it, lower class citizens. All of that change during the Second World War when these same Cajuns arrived in French-dominated territories, like North Africa and Europe, where their French-speaking abilities became a vital resource. This had a profound impact of their sense of a Cajun identity. What emerged from this unique wartime experience was a long-lost pride in their heritage. When the military needed bi-lingual interpreters, they called on Frenchie to bridge the language gap"--

Cajun Knights

Cajun Knights
Author: John Francois
Publisher: Infinity Publishing
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2006-04
Genre: Cajuns
ISBN: 0741430932

Marc Delaterre discovers that his son, Duc, has an evil inside him so horrible that when he tries to help the boy discover the source of it, he runs the risk of losing him.

Dictionary of Louisiana French

Dictionary of Louisiana French
Author: Albert Valdman
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 934
Release: 2010
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 1604734043

The Dictionary of Louisiana French (DLF) provides the richest inventory of French vocabulary in Louisiana and reflects precisely the speech of the period from 1930 to the present. This dictionary describes the current usage of French-speaking peoples in the five broad regions of South Louisiana: the coastal marshes, the banks of the Mississippi River, the central area, the north, and the western prairie. Data were collected during interviews from at least five persons in each of twenty-four areas in these regions. In addition to the data collected from fieldwork, the dictionary contains material compiled from existing lexical inventories, from texts published after 1930, and from archival recordings. The new authoritative resource, the DLF not only contains the largest number of words and expressions but also provides the most complete information available for each entry. Entries include the word in the conventional French spelling, the pronunciation (including attested variants), the part of speech classification, the English equivalent, and the word's use in common phrases. The DLF features a wealth of illustrative examples derived from fieldwork and textual sources and identification of the parish where the entry was collected or the source from which it was compiled. An English-to-Louisiana French index enables readers to find out how particular notions would be expressed in la Louisiane .

Cajuns and Their Acadian Ancestors

Cajuns and Their Acadian Ancestors
Author: Shane K. Bernard
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2010-02-11
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1604733217

Cajuns and Their Acadian Ancestors: A Young Reader's History traces the four-hundred-year history of this distinct American ethnic group. While written in a format comprehensible to junior-high and high-school students, it will prove appealing and informative as well to adult readers seeking a one-volume exploration of these remarkable people and their predecessors. The narrative follows the Cajuns' early ancestors, the Acadians, from seventeenth-century France to Nova Scotia, where they flourished until British soldiers expelled them in a tragic event called Le Grand Dérangement (The Great Upheaval)—an episode regarded by many historians as an instance of ethnic cleansing or genocide. Up to one-half of the Acadian population died from disease, starvation, exposure, or outright violence in the expulsion. Nearly three thousand survivors journeyed through the thirteen American colonies to Spanish-controlled Louisiana. There they resettled, intermarried with members of the local population, and evolved into the Cajun people, who today number over a half-million. Since their arrival in Louisiana, the Cajuns have developed an unmistakable identity and a strong sense of ethnic pride. In recent decades they have contributed their exotic cuisine and accordion-and-fiddle dance music to American popular culture. Cajuns and Their Acadian Ancestors: A Young Reader's History includes numerous images and over a dozen sidebars on topics ranging from Cajun music to Mardi Gras.

A Great and Noble Scheme: The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland

A Great and Noble Scheme: The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland
Author: John Mack Faragher
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 609
Release: 2006-02-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 0393242439

"Altogether superb: an accessible, fluent account that advances scholarship while building a worthy memorial to the victims of two and a half centuries past." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In 1755, New England troops embarked on a "great and noble scheme" to expel 18,000 French-speaking Acadians ("the neutral French") from Nova Scotia, killing thousands, separating innumerable families, and driving many into forests where they waged a desperate guerrilla resistance. The right of neutrality; to live in peace from the imperial wars waged between France and England; had been one of the founding values of Acadia; its settlers traded and intermarried freely with native Mikmaq Indians and English Protestants alike. But the Acadians' refusal to swear unconditional allegiance to the British Crown in the mid-eighteenth century gave New Englanders, who had long coveted Nova Scotia's fertile farmland, pretense enough to launch a campaign of ethnic cleansing on a massive scale. John Mack Faragher draws on original research to weave 150 years of history into a gripping narrative of both the civilization of Acadia and the British plot to destroy it.