341 REVIEW Wade, Leslie A., Robin Roberts, and Frank De Caro. Downtown Mardi Gras
REVIEW Wade, Leslie A., Robin Roberts, and Frank de Caro. Downtown Mardi Gras: New Carnival Practices in Post-Katrina New Orleans. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2019. 256 pp. $99.00 (hardcover), ISBN 978-1-4968-2378-6; $30.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-4968-2384-7 Vaz-Deville, Kim, ed. Walking Raddy: The New Orleans Baby Dolls. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2018. 384 pp. $90.00 (hardcover), ISBN 978-1-4968-1739-6; $30.00m ISBN 978-1- 4968-1740-2 Aurélie Godet Université de Paris, France One of the few positive consequences of Hurricane Katrina (2005) has been a surge of interest in Louisiana cultural traditions among local and nonlocal anthropologists, historians, folklorists, geographers, and sociologists. Unsurprisingly, New Orleans Carnival has received the lion’s share of those scholarly efforts, and a number of books have explored its complex history and contemporary manifestations.1 In this review I focus on two of the most recent: Leslie A. Wade, Robin Roberts, and Frank de Caro’s ethnographic study of new carnival practices in the city’s downtown area and Kim Vaz-Deville’s edited collection on the New Orleans “Baby Dolls,” an African American female performance tradition that has experienced a remarkable renaissance in the twenty-first century. Though different in goal, scope, and methodology, both volumes contribute significantly to our understanding of the “city that care forgot.”2 In the introduction to Downtown Mardi Gras, Wade dwells on the significance of carnival for both residents and the outside world in a post-Katrina context. To New Orleanians, the festive season “functions as a touchstone, organizing relationships and rivalries between its citizens.” In other words, it stands as a “key constituent of identity and belonging” (p.
[Show full text]