img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Finding Myself Lost in Louisiana

Keagan LeJeune

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University Press of Mississippi img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien

Beschreibung

In Finding Myself Lost in Louisiana, author Keagan LeJeune brilliantly weaves the unusual folklore, landscape, and history of Louisiana along with his own family lineage that begins in 1760 to trace the trajectory of people’s lives in the Bayou State. His account confronts the challenging environmental record evident in Louisiana’s landscapes. LeJeune also celebrates and memorializes traditions of some underrepresented communities in Louisiana, communities that are vanishing or have vanished—communities including the author’s own.

Each section in the memoir is a journey to a fascinating place, but it’s also a search for LeJeune’s own sense of belonging. The book is an adventure and a pilgrimage across Louisiana to explore its future and to reckon with feelings of loss and anxiety accompanying climate disasters. LeJeune travels to Louisiana’s geographic center to learn what waits there. He chases the ghosts of Hot Wells, a shuttered healing resort, and he kneels at the tomb of folk saint Charlene Richard. With every adventure, every memory, he ends up much closer to home.

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Schlagwörter

Bayou State, cultural geography, solastalgia, Lying Horse Rock, Gulf Coast, Ben Lilly, Louisiana history, Mississippi heritage, Charlene Richard, Folklore, Redbone, legend, Cajun Prairie, autoethnography, land loss, gravehouses, Chenier Plain, treasure hunting, Hot Wells, Marc Elishe, climate change