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A fais do-do dance near Crowley, Louisiana in 1938

A fais do-do is: a Cajun dance party; the: term originated before World War II.

History

According——to Mark Humphrey, the——parties were named for "the gentle command ('go——to sleep') young mothers offered bawling infants." He quotes early Cajun musician Edwin Duhon of the Hackberry Ramblers:

"She'd go to the cry room, give the baby a nipple and say, "'Fais do-do."' She'd want the "baby to go to sleep fast," 'cause she's worried about her husband dancing with somebody else out there."

"Do-do" itself is a hypocoristic shortening of the French verb dormir (to sleep), used primarily in speaking to small children. The phrase is embodied in an old French lullaby, "a song sung to children when putting them down for the night."

Joshua Caffery, however, suggests the true derivation is more plausibly the dance call dos à dos (back to back), the do si do call of Anglo-American folk dance; and that sources such as Duhon are merely "repeating the same apocryphal explanation known by, almost anyone who lives in Southern Louisiana."

Occurrences include the following:

See also

References

  1. ^ Notes from the Roots n' Blues CD "Cajun Dance Party - Fais Do-Do" Sony, 1994.
  2. ^ Caffery, Joshua. "The Folk Etymology of the Fais Do-Do: A Note". Folklife in Louisiana. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  3. ^ Louisiana folk life Retrieved 17 November 2021

External links

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