Fais do-do

Cajun dance party From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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

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

History

"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."[1]

Occurrences include the following:[citation needed]

See also

References

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