BIOGRAPHY
Ph.D. (2000) Francophone Studies,
UL Lafayette
M.A. (1975) Linguistics/French,
the Ohio State UniversityB.A. (1969) Linguistics/French,
the Ohio State University Clifton currently serves as the Curator of Collections for the Lafayette
Natural History Museum and Planetarium. She is also a research associate
at the Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism and a member of the adjunct
faculty of the Department of Modern Languages, University of Louisiana
at Lafayette. She earned her Ph.D. in Francophone Studies from the University of Louisiana
at Lafayette in 2000, specializing in Linguistics, Folklore, and Health
Systems of Francophone Countries. Her doctoral dissertation, N’avait
Cauchemar té gain nom: Stress Transformers and Diabetes among North
Americans of Native and French Descent, was directed by Dr. Dominique
Ryon (Ph.D. Linguistic Anthropology, University of Montreal, 1993).Dr. Clifton holds a Master’s degree in Linguistics and French
from the Ohio State University and has studied at the University of Montreal
in Montreal, Quebec.She has done post-doctoral
work at Louisiana State University School of Library and Information science,
specializing in Health Sciences Information and Archival Preservation.
In addition to her work at the Lafayette Natural History Museum/Planetarium
and the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, she has taught at Louisiana
State University, the Ohio State University, the University of Quebec
at Montreal, and has recently returned from doing a stage at Laval University
in Quebec City, Canada. In addition, Clifton
is the author of A cette heure, la louve, a collection of poems
and stories dealing with the symbolic culture of Francophone Louisiana.
This book was nominated in 2001 for the Prix Marguerite Yourcenar; an
international literary prize awarded every other year to a Francophone
writer living in the United States. Clifton is a past
recipient of the Prix du Bayou, awarded by Action Cadienne and the Prix de Louisiane, awarded by CODOFIL. Her writing, both literary
and technical, has appeared in various publications, most recently in Working the Field: Accounts from French Louisiana (Henry and LeMenestrel,
eds. Praeger, 2003) and in the journal, Economic Botany (57,2.
2003) Her research focuses
on the areas of symbolic representation systems and health communication;
ethnohistorical epidemiology; the role of information access in healing;
cultural dimensions of the therapeutic relationship; health issues affecting
cultural resource workers; and preservation of scientific and biomedical
research collections. She serves as advisor to several organizations on
questions concerning healthcare and human rights, and works actively to
promote preservation and conservation of cultural resources in health
and humanitarian crises. Dr. Clifton can be contacted at dclifton@lafayettegov.net or djc1800@louisiana.edu. Her own research interests
focus on Type II Diabetes in francophone communities and on reconstructing
the history of epidemic disease in colonial Louisiana. Those interested in health issues in Francophone communities and diabetes please contact Dr. Clifton as the email address provided above.
An important theme in
her work is the concept of social homeostasis, developed by Anthony F.C.
Wallace, and the role of traditional cultural practices in helping communities
to maintain a balanced relationship with the natural environment.