Meet LSU's experts on Louisiana Mardi Gras
January 01, 2023
One of the things Louisiana is best known for is Mardi Gras, which is French for “Fat Tuesday.” Mardi Gras is celebrated in a variety of ways around the state, but most include eating king cake, participating in parades, and costuming. The holiday represents an integral part of Louisiana’s culture and heritage.
LSU faculty experts are available for media interviews about the Mardi Gras history and traditions. LSU also has a video uplink studio with live broadcast capabilities for any outlets wishing to conduct on-camera interviews.
LSU researchers available to speak on Mardi Gras include:
Alecia P. Long, associate professor, history
Contact: 225-578-4458 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: 19th and 20th century social and cultural history of the United
States, especially Louisiana and New Orleans
Carolyn Ware, associate professor, English
Contact: 225-578-3022 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: rural Cajun Mardi Gras celebrations, coastal folk culture (especially
Plaquemines Parish), Louisiana Croatian folklife, human-animal relationships and veterinary
culture.
Helen Regis, associate professor, geography and anthropology
Contact: 225-578-6171 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: Mardi Gras marching groups, innovation and tradition, alternative
parades, New Orleans, gender, neighborhoods, race/racism, public space
Joyce Jackson, professor of folklore and ethnomusicology, geography and anthropology
Contact: 225-578-5942 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: Mardi Gras Indian traditions; had an exhibit at the Smithsonian
on Mardi Gras Indians and has done oral histories with several of the Mardi Gras Indian
chiefs and members
Mark Martin, LSU Libraries Special Collections photographic processing archivist
Contact: 225-578-6501 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: New Orleans and Baton Rouge Mardi Gras and the Baton Rouge’s Firemen’s
Parade of the late-19th and early-20th centuries, which was the Baton Rouge substitute
for Mardi Gras
Michael Pasquier, associate professor, religious studies and history
Contact: 225-578-2271 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: Roman Catholicism in the South, Roman Catholic traditions surrounding
Mardi Gras and into lent
Stephen Barnes, assistant professor of research in economics; director of the Economics and Policy
Research Group
Contact: 225-578-3783 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: economic benefits of tourism and Mardi Gras; labor economics;
health economics; regional economics; public finance; applied econometric and environmental
related studies
Wes Shrum, professor, sociology
Contact: 225-578-5319 / [email protected]
Areas of expertise: Ritual disrobement at Mardi Gras, nudity, new traditions
LSU Libraries Special Collections:
The LSU Libraries have a number of collections related to Mardi Gras history and traditions:
- Selection of articles covering this topic in the digitized Louisiana newspapers
- Mardi Gras Mombo Collection
For more information, contact LSU Libraries Special Collections at 225-578-6544 or [email protected].
LSU School of Veterinary Medicine:
Mardi Gras Dos and Don'ts for Pets