Jean-Michel Guilcher

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Born24 September 1914
Died27 March 2017(2017-03-27) (aged 102)
EducationLycée de Brest
Jean-Michel Guilcher
Born24 September 1914
Died27 March 2017(2017-03-27) (aged 102)
EducationLycée de Brest
Alma materUniversity of Paris
OccupationEthnologist
SpouseHélène Guilcher
Children3

Jean-Michel Guilcher (24 September 1914 – 27 March 2017) was a French ethnologist. He was a researcher at the CNRS, and he taught ethnology at the University of Western Brittany. He was the author of eight books about traditional dances.

Jean-Michel Guilcher was born on 24 September 1914 in Saint-Pierre-Quilbignon, Finistère.[1][2][3] One of his grandmothers, who was from Aber-Ildut, sang the gwerz.[4]

Guilcher was educated at the Lycée de Brest.[4] He graduated from the University of Paris, where he studied natural history.[4] He also took dance lessons from Alick-Maud Pledge.[4] Later, he was mentored by the ethnologist Patrice Coirault, and he attended classes taught by Jacques Chailley with Constantin Brăiloiu.[4] He subsequently earned a PhD in Dance Studies.[4]

Career

Guilcher worked for Jeune France, a traditional dance organization in Lyon, from 1939 to 1942.[4] During that time, he researched the traditional dances of villages near Lyon.[4] He subsequently worked for Paul Faucher, where he edited Père Castor, a collection of children's books.[4] After the war, he began researching the traditional dances of villages in Brittany.[4]

Guilcher began working for the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) in 1955.[4] He later worked for the Musée national des Arts et Traditions Populaires, where he founded a section about dance.[4] He was a professor of ethnology at the University of Western Brittany from 1969 to 1979.[5] He subsequently served as the director of a research centre at the University of Western Brittany and the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences.[2]

Guilcher was the author of eight books about the traditional dances of Brittany.[1][2]

Personal life and death

Works

References

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