Guy Logsdon: Award-winning Folklorist - E-book - ePub

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 Stan Paregien - Guy Logsdon: Award-winning Folklorist.
Guy W. Logsdon grew up in Ada, OK. He graduated from Ada High School, from East Central State University, and worked in two of the family businesses in... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Guy W. Logsdon grew up in Ada, OK. He graduated from Ada High School, from East Central State University, and worked in two of the family businesses in Ada ( a furniture store and a Western wear store) before becoming the owner of the former Stall Photography Studio. He went on to earn a doctorate, to become a folklore professor at the University of Tulsa, and to become the leading authority on Woody Guthrie's life and music, on Western swing music and two of its principle performers (Bob Wills and Johnnie Lee Wills), and an expert on traditional (and bawdy) cowboy music.
His long list of publications includes such books as Woody's Road with Woody Guthrie's only living sibling, Mary Jo Guthrie Edgmon (2012); and with Marvin E. Kroeker, Logsdon wrote, Ada, Oklahoma, Queen City of the Chickasaw Nation: A Pictorial History (1998). With co-writers Mary Rogers and William Jacobson, Logsdon wrote, Saddle Serenaders (1995). By himself he wrote, The University of Tulsa: A History, 1882-1972 (1977) and "The Whorehouse Bells Were Ringing"and Other Songs Cowboys Sing (1989).
Among Guy W. Logsdon's honors so far are these: historical consultant on the 1976 movie "Bound for Glory" on the life of Woody Guthrie; coordinator of Oklahoma's Diamond Jubilee Celebration (75th anniversary) in Washington, D. C.; and author of 23 articles in Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, the online publication of the Oklahoma Historical Society. And in 1999 he won the "Westerners International Co-Founders Award" from the Western History Association for his book, "The Whorehouse Bells Were Ringing" and Other Songs Cowboys Sing ; one of the founders of the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada in 1985; the founder and director of the Oklahoma Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Oklahoma City (which ran from 1992 to 1999); in 1997 he won two coveted awards -- the "American Cowboy Culture Award" from the National Cowboy Symposium & Celebration (Lubbock, TX) for his contributions to Western music .

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    12/01/2013
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-1-301-63330-2
  • EAN
    9781301633302
  • Format
    ePub
  • Caractéristiques du format ePub
    • Protection num.
      pas de protection

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Stan Paregien

Stan Paregien Sr was born in Wapanucka (Johnston County), Oklahoma to Harold and Evelyn (Cauthen) Paregien. The family moved west the year after his birth and he grew up on ranches and farms where his father worked in southern California. One of those places where Harold Paregien worked was the Newhall Ranch, a corporate ranching and farming operation that stretched for miles either side of the highway from the towns of Newhall (now Santa Clarita) to Piru.
Stan was already in love with anything cowboy, mostly by watching those great B-Westerns at the local movie theaters. And then on the Newhall Ranch (officially known as the Newhall Land & Farming Company) he and his sister Roberta acquired horses and rode happy trails all over the ranch. Paregien graduated from high school in 1959 at Fillmore, Calif. He married Peggy Ruth Allen from nearby Ventura, Calif., in 1962.
They immediately moved to Nashville, Tennessee for Stan to study Speech Communication (and history and Bible) at Lipscomb University. He graduated in 1965. In 1968, he received his master's degree from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. Then he completed all 60-hours of the classwork toward a Ph. D. in Speech Communication at the University of Oklahoma (but did not complete his other requirements).
He has taken and is still taking continuing education courses in Life Skills through the University of Hard Knocks. He is a former full-time minister, a newspaper reporter and editor, a radio talk show host, a director of mental health facilities in both Texas and Oklahoma, and a salesman of various products. His hobby since 1990 has been writing and performing cowboy poetry and stories. He performed at the annual National Cowboy Symposium in Lubbock, Texas for a total of some 25 years.
Through it all, he has been and is a freelance writer and author. He prefers just calling himself a "storyteller" in the tradition of Mark Twain, Louis L'Amour, Elmer Kelton, Garrison Keillor, Ansel Adams, Norman Rockwell, J. Frank Dobie, Agatha Christie and others. Sometimes he tells stories through narration, sometimes through poetry and often through photography. Stan and Peggy have two adult children, Stan Paregien Jr who lives with his family in the St.
Louis area; and Stacy Magness who lives with her family near College Station, Texas. They also have four grandchildren (going on five, with an adoption in progress) and two great-grandchildren. T...

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