Archive for the ‘Opinion’ Category
Debunking the Alleged Origin of the Word “Coonass”
by Shane K. Bernard
Reposted with permission from Bayou Teche Dispatches
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| A novelty “Registered Coonass” sticker. |
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| Excerpt from a 1981 resolution condemning the word coonass. |
I myself had always assumed that a blue-ribbon panel of university-trained linguists must have formulated the conasse explanation. I was therefore surprised to learn that it was merely one man’s unconfirmed hypothesis. (Someone who had not taken Domengeaux’s etymology at face value was Cajun scholar Barry Jean Ancelet of the University of Southwestern Louisiana, now the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Ancelet rejected Domengeaux’s notion as “shaky linguistics at best.”)
It was quite by accident, however, that I ended up debunking Domengeaux’s popular conasse etymology.
In the late 1990s I was searching the online database of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration for anything having to do with the Nike-Cajun rocket. The U.S. military invented the Nike-Cajun in the 1950s as a sounding rocket for testing the atmosphere. But why, I wondered, had it been called the Nike-Cajun rocket? The name evoked a strange combination of ancient Greek mythology and rural south Louisiana folklife.
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| A Nike-Cajun rocket. |
I’ll explain the origin of the Nike-Cajun in a later posting — but it was while researching this rocket that I stumbled across a reference to World War II stock footage depicting something called the Cajun Coonass.
What in the world was that? I wondered. As it turned out, the Cajun Coonass was the nickname of a U.S. warplane. In fact, the National Archives had a photograph of the airplane shot by the Army Signal Corps in April 1943.
The date’s significance took a few seconds to register. “That’s over a year before D-Day.”
In other words, it was over a year before there were any Cajuns in France to be called conasse, the word that supposedly morphed into coonass: Domengeaux’s etymology was wrong.
Ordering a print of the photograph, I found that it did indeed show a U.S. airplane, specifically a C-47, sporting the word coonass on its fuselage — juxtaposed (some would say redundantly) with the word Cajun.
According to Army Signal Corps data from the back of the original print, the image was made not only over a year before the Allied invasion of France, but halfway around the world, in the South Pacific. (The plane’s pilot, I should explain, was a Cajun from Sunset, Louisiana, and thus he had the privilege of naming the plane. It’s therefore interesting that he chose the word coonass.)
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1943 photograph of the C-47 Cajun Coonass (with enlarged inset).
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That is What KBON is About!
“LET US BEFORE WE DIE, GATHER UP OUR HERITAGE & OFFER IT TO OUR CHILDREN”
That my friends, above all else, is what KBON 101.1FM is all about!
Listen to the only radio station of its kind IN THE WORLD, KBON 101.1FM, & enjoy the music of our LOCAL MUSICIANS ! We are “LOUISIANA PROUD” 24/7/365!!
Ayeeeeeeeeee, Let The Meatball Roll Chere!!
PAUL MARX
Owner/ Program Director
KBON 101.1FM
www.kbon.com
My Favorite Accomplishment
By: Paul Marx
Owner of “Louisiana Proud” KBON 101.1FM
I started this radio station, KBON 101.1FM, because I believed that there needed to be a change in local broadcasting. I was fed up with our local music & musicians being ignored, except for an hour or two early in the morning or a few hours on weekends. It was as though our local music & artists were “not good enough” to be on the “regular” daily music rotation.
If there is one of my KBON accomplishments that I am most proud of, it’s the fact that now, because of doing such a variety mix of music and not separating the music as it had been for way too many years, all the music is EQUAL on KBON; our local musicians get the same spotlight as the national artists!
When it comes to my selection of songs to have on the KBON 101.1FM daily rotation I have learned that there is no way I will ever be able to please everyone. From a musical standpoint, I try to be fair to all the music I receive for possible air play, while at the same time trying to be fair to our overall listening audience. Not everything I get in will be played, but I assure you, more will make it on the KBON playlist than on any other radio station!!
Of course a person can be “LOUISIANA PROUD” and still enjoy music other than Louisiana artists, but it’s important to a “Louisiana Proud” person to always be able to hear it when they want to hear it, and that my friends, is where KBON 101.1FM comes in. Our music is about 85% Louisiana artists, 24/7/365! Now DAT’S “Louisiana Proud” baby!!! Ayieeeeeeeeeee, where the ice chest babe???
Thanks for being a fan and a friend!
Paul Marx
Owner/ Program Director
KBON 101.1FM




