Christian churches are important influences on Louisiana’s cultural life, especially the Roman Catholic Church in southern Louisiana and the Baptists in northern Louisiana and among African Americans throughout the state. New Orleans and many smaller communities have been able to support the arts and philanthropic institutions. The Creoles developed a distinctive architecture, art, and cuisine centred on New Orleans.
In rural culture and the arts, Louisiana more than holds its own. This is especially evident in the realm of music, whether it be African American song (including the celebrated rural blues), Cajun fiddling at the fais do-dos (country dances held in southern Louisiana), the Creole zydeco tradition, or the community hymn singing of northern Louisiana. The urban jazz style that was taken by New Orleans migrants to Chicago and elsewhere, as well as the Dixieland music played by bands at Preservation Hall in New Orleans, are also hallmarks of Louisiana’s cultural heritage.
Louisiana has produced a number of important literary figures, including Truman Capote and Ernest J. Gaines. Many of Capote’s earlier works were set in the South, while the bulk of Gaines’s novels were cast specifically in Louisiana. Gaines’s The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971) was highly acclaimed for its depiction of rural life in Louisiana from an African American perspective.
Since the early 19th century, New Orleans has been a major cultural centre of the United States. Its French Quarter has attracted such artists as John J. Audubon, the great wildlife painter, and George Catlin, noted for his portrayals of the American West, and has been the haunt of writers such as Walt Whitman, Sherwood Anderson, and William Faulkner. The city has also been home to an opera company, as well as various symphony orchestras since the mid-20th century. Other cities, notably Shreveport, Monroe, Baton Rouge, and Lafayette, have established their own museums and galleries, orchestras, choruses, theatres, and other cultural institutions, especially since the 1930s.
Tourism has developed as an important component of the state’s economy, using the appeal of the antebellum past and the attraction of Creole cuisine—a blend of French, Spanish, African American, and Native American dishes. A series of parades and balls culminating in Mardi Gras (Shrove Tuesday) has become a national attraction in New Orleans. There are many public parks and gardens, and the state is advertised as a sportsman’s paradise for hunting and fishing.
New Orleans is an important centre for both professional and collegiate sports. Tulane usually fields strong collegiate gridiron football teams, and the city is also home to the National Football League (NFL) Saints team. The Super Bowl NFL championship game has been played on multiple occasions in New Orleans, and the Sugar Bowl of collegiate football is held there annually (generally early in January). New Orleans also has a professional men’s basketball team (the Hornets). In Baton Rouge, LSU has long been a powerhouse in both collegiate football and basketball. The state’s larger cities also host a number of minor league football, baseball, and ice hockey teams.
The literate Creole culture provided the state with a long press tradition; the first newspaper, Le Moniteur de la Louisiane, appeared in 1794. Eight others were published in New Orleans at the turn of the 19th century, and the rural parishes likewise published their own papers. The New Orleans Times-Picayune, one of the state’s oldest newspapers, has the largest circulation in Louisiana. There are about 20 other dailies published in the state. Louisiana is well served by numerous radio stations and nearly three dozen television stations.
Louisiana has produced a number of important literary figures, including Truman Capote and Ernest J. Gaines. Many of Capote’s earlier works were set in the South, while the bulk of Gaines’s novels were cast specifically in Louisiana. Gaines’s The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971) was highly acclaimed for its depiction of rural life in Louisiana from an African American perspective.
Since the early 19th century, New Orleans has been a major cultural centre of the United States. Its French Quarter has attracted such artists as John J. Audubon, the great wildlife painter, and George Catlin, noted for his portrayals of the American West, and has been the haunt of writers such as Walt Whitman, Sherwood Anderson, and William Faulkner. The city has also been home to an opera company, as well as various symphony orchestras since the mid-20th century. Other cities, notably Shreveport, Monroe, Baton Rouge, and Lafayette, have established their own museums and galleries, orchestras, choruses, theatres, and other cultural institutions, especially since the 1930s.
Tourism has developed as an important component of the state’s economy, using the appeal of the antebellum past and the attraction of Creole cuisine—a blend of French, Spanish, African American, and Native American dishes. A series of parades and balls culminating in Mardi Gras (Shrove Tuesday) has become a national attraction in New Orleans. There are many public parks and gardens, and the state is advertised as a sportsman’s paradise for hunting and fishing.
New Orleans is an important centre for both professional and collegiate sports. Tulane usually fields strong collegiate gridiron football teams, and the city is also home to the National Football League (NFL) Saints team. The Super Bowl NFL championship game has been played on multiple occasions in New Orleans, and the Sugar Bowl of collegiate football is held there annually (generally early in January). New Orleans also has a professional men’s basketball team (the Hornets). In Baton Rouge, LSU has long been a powerhouse in both collegiate football and basketball. The state’s larger cities also host a number of minor league football, baseball, and ice hockey teams.
The literate Creole culture provided the state with a long press tradition; the first newspaper, Le Moniteur de la Louisiane, appeared in 1794. Eight others were published in New Orleans at the turn of the 19th century, and the rural parishes likewise published their own papers. The New Orleans Times-Picayune, one of the state’s oldest newspapers, has the largest circulation in Louisiana. There are about 20 other dailies published in the state. Louisiana is well served by numerous radio stations and nearly three dozen television stations.


