biography
| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1912–91)
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| biography:
| Scholar of oral traditions, born in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. He was educated at Harvard (1934 BA; 1936 MA; 1949 PhD), where he was a member of the faculty from 1940 until his retirement (1983) as the Arthur Kingsley Porter professor of Slavic and Comparative Literature. In the 1930s, along with Milman Parry, he recorded and transcribed more than 12 000 oral epics of Serbo-Croatian singers, work which he continued after Parry's death (1935). Parry and Lord's work with the Serbo-Croatian oral poets led them to conclude that Homer was an oral poet, a theory that revolutionized Homeric studies. His publications include Serbo-Croatian Folk Tales (1951, with Bela Bartok), Singer of Tales (1960), and Epic Singers and Oral Tradition (1991). His numerous awards include the Order of the Yugoslav Flag with Golden Wreath (1988). |
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