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John Holmes McDowell


John Holmes McDowell (born 25 September 1946) is a Professor in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University Bloomington. He also serves as Director of the Minority Languages and Cultures of Latin America Project at Indiana University. Broadly speaking his work is centered on performance and communication as well as the interplay of creativity and tradition. Geographically most of his fieldwork has been in Mexico, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, and Ghana. His interests include Speech play and verbal art; the corrido of Greater Mexico; music, myth, and cosmology in the Andes; commemoration; folklorization; ethnopoetics; Latin America; the United States.

He graduated from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania in 1969 with a B.A. in Music. He received a Ph.D. in Anthropology from University of Texas at Austin where he majored in Folklore and minored in English Literature and Linguistics. His dissertation was titled The Speech Play and Verbal Art of Chicano Children: An Ethnographic and Sociolinguistic Study.

He is the author of five books: Children’s Riddling (1979), Sayings of the Ancestors: The Spiritual Life of the Sibundoy Indians (1989),“So Wise Were Our Elders”: Mythic Narratives of the Kamsá (1994), based on fieldwork with an indigenous community in Colombia, Poetry and Violence: The Ballad Tradition of Mexico’s Costa Chica (2000), a study of the ballad tradition in southern coastal Mexico, and ¡Corrido! The Living Ballad of Mexico's Western Coast (2015). He was also editor or co-editor of the following books or volumes: Andean Musics. Andean Studies Occasional Papers. V.3 Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (1987),Andean Cosmologies through Time: Persistence and Emergence (1992),Stith Thompson’s A Folklorist’s Progress: Reflections of a Scholar’s Life (1996), and Dancing the Ancestors: Carnival in South America (2001). Additionally he has published more than 30 articles on subjects ranging from the Mexican corrido to Children’s folklore.


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