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BIOGRAPHY
Carl A. Brasseaux,
Professor of History and Director of the Center for Cultural and
Eco-Tourism, is one of the world's leading authorities on French
North America, with extensive expertise in the areas of Acadian/Cajun
and Creole history and culture. He holds a doctorate from the Université
de Paris, from which he was graduated with highest distinction.
Brasseaux has published thirty-three volumes of material on Louisiana
and French North America. His latest work, which was released on
CD-ROM in 2000, is a 1,850-page biographical dictionary including
sketches of all persons known to have served the French monarchy
in the Mississippi Valley and Gulf Coast regions during the eighteenth
century. In addition, Brasseaux has published 101 chapters in books
or articles in scholarly journals throughout North America and Europe.
His current research project consists of the establishment of a
database that will serve as the foundation for a book on Louisiana's
environmental history. The database currently includes over 5,000
entries drawn from eyewitness descriptions of the area's native
flora and fauna, including such extinct species as the Carolina
parakeet, the wood bison, and the prairie hen.
Brasseaux's articles and books have served as a major wellspring
of information for the Pelican State's cultural tourism industry.
His published histories of the Acadian/Cajun and Creole communities,
for example, are used to train interpreters at all of the major
museums and interpretive centers in Louisiana.
Brasseaux's contributions have by no means been confined to the
arena of research and writing. Since 1975, he has been an editor
and associate manager of the Center for Louisiana Studies publications
program, which has published approximately 200 book-length works
on the Pelican State's history and culture. Started with $200 in
seed money, this operation now generates six figures in gross annual
income. The Center's publications have been the driving force behind
Louisiana's cultural tourism programs, because they constitute the
main corpus of modern research on Louisiana's most colorful and
exceedingly complex communities.
In addition to his involvement with the Center publications program,
Brasseaux is managing editor of Louisiana History, the state historical
journal. This journal has consistently ranked among the nation's
top ten state historical magazines.
He has been a pioneer in the area of public history, breaking down
the walls of academe and interpreting cutting edge research in the
Humanities for the general community. In 1976, he helped organize
the Louisiane Bien-Aimée exhibit that occupied an entire
floor of the Radio France building in Paris. This exhibit was awarded
a gold medal by the United States Department of Commerce as the
best United States exhibit sent abroad during the bicentennial year.
He also helped produce the Green Fields: Two Hundred Years of Louisiana
Sugar exhibit that was displayed at the United States Agricultural
Library in Washington, D.C., in 1981. Brasseaux has also served
as a guest speaker and interpreter for numerous other exhibits dealing
with topics as varied as the Great Depression in Louisiana, the
state's coastal wetlands, Louisiana women of the early twentieth
century, and Louis XIV and his North American legacy.
Brasseaux's oral presentations have not been confined to exhibitions.
Over the course of his career, he has read sixty-two papers at professional
meetings throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe to such
learned groups as the Organization of American Historians, the American
Society for Ethnohistory, the American Culture Association, the
Society of American Archivists, American Association for the Advancement
of Science, the French Colonial Historical Society, the Louisiana
Historical Society, and the Mississippi Historical Society. He has,
moreover, presented perhaps three times as many informal talks to
civic, cultural, and educational groups. He has also appeared with
Center for Louisiana staff and associates in presenting dramatic
readings on historical topics.
Carl Brasseaux's public history work has taken many forms. He has
worked extensively as a consultant with the national park system,
the state museum, the state parks system, and numerous other historical
agencies operating museums and interpretive centers, including Vermilionville
and Acadian Village. He was a member of the committee that compiled
the content and established the interpretive program for the Jean
Lafitte National Park interpretive centers, the first national park
programs designed to interpret culture rather than landmarks or
pristine landscapes. This program is now a model national park system.
Brasseaux has also worked closely with civic, cultural and historical
groups from communities throughout Louisiana in establishing small
municipal museums, cultural centers, and publishing programs to
mark notable local historical anniversaries. He has also served
as a member of the Advisory Board of the Southwest Louisiana Zydeco
Music Festival.
Over the past three years, Brasseaux has worked closely with the
City of St. Martinville to design and produce two major interactive
multimedia databases for local museums. The Ensemble Encore database,
established for the Acadian Memorial Museum, formally opened during
the Congr2s Mondial Acadien. This database contains biographical
sketches of all known Acadian exiles and includes more than 4,500
pages of material. He is currently working on a similar database
for South Louisiana's African American population.
Carl Brasseaux is also active in producing other small-screen presentations.
Over the past twenty-five years he has served as a consultant to
more than a dozen major documentaries produced in Louisiana and
Canada. He was one of three executive producers of a documentary
on Acadian/Cajun history, a project whose combined budget and production
materials values exceeded $1,500,000.
Finally, Brasseaux has been actively involved with governmental
and private agencies in promoting Louisiana tourism. In 1988, Brasseaux
was a photographer and writer for a multi-media presentation produced
for the St. Martin Parish Tourism Bureau. He has given numerous
informal talks to persons employed in the local tourism industry,
and he helped to organize, and was a speaker at, a major tourism
symposium held at the Cajundome in 1992.
Brasseaux's activities have attracted national and international
notoriety. He has been quoted in such national publications as the
Wall Street Journal, the Montreal Le Presse, U.S.A. Today, the Atlantic
Monthly, and National Geographic. He is listed in the Dictionary
of International Biography, Who's Who in the South and Southwest,
Contemporary Writers, International Authors, Personalities of the
South, and International Authors and Writers Who's Who. He is listed
in the 2000 edition of Who's Who in the World.
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