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Mardi Gras Beads (Paperback)
Loot Price: R441
Discovery Miles 4 410
You Save: R95
(18%)
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Mardi Gras Beads (Paperback)
Series: Louisiana True
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List price R536
Loot Price R441
Discovery Miles 4 410
You Save R95 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Beads are one of the great New Orleans symbols, as much a signifier
of the city as a pot of scarlet crawfish or a jazzman's trumpet.
They are Louisiana's version of the Hawaiian lei, strung around
tourists' and conventioneers' necks to demonstrate enthusiasm for
the city. The first in a new LSU Press series exploring facets of
Louisiana's iconic culture, Mardi Gras Beads delves into the
history of this celebrated New Orleans artefact, explaining how
Mardi Gras beads came to be in the first place and how they grew to
have such an outsize presence in New Orleans celebrations. Beads
are a big business based on valuelessness. Approximately 130
shipping containers, each filled with 40,000 pounds of Chinese-made
beads and other baubles, arrive at New Orleans's biggest Mardi Gras
throw importer each Carnival season. Beads are an unnatural part of
the natural landscape, persistently dangling from the trees along
parade routes like Spanish moss. They clutter the doorknobs of the
city, sway behind its rearview mirrors, test the load-bearing
strength of its attic rafters, and clog its all-important rainwater
removal system. Mardi Gras Beads traces the history of these parade
trinkets from their origins in Twelfth Night festivities through
their ascent to the premier parade catchable by the Depression era.
Veteran Mardi Gras reporter Doug MacCash explores the manufacture
of Mardi Gras beads in places as far-flung as the Sudetenland,
India, and Japan, and traces the shift away from glass beads to the
modern, disposable plastic versions. Mardi Gras Beads concludes in
the era of coronavirus, when parades (and therefore bead throwing)
were temporarily suspended because of health concerns, and
considers the future of biodegradable Mardi Gras beads in a city
ever more threatened by the specter of climate change.
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