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American linguist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Gordon Armistead (August 21, 1927 – August 7, 2013) was an American ethnographer, linguist, folklorist, historian, literary critic and professor of Spanish.[1] He is considered one of the most notable Hispanist scholars of the second half of the 20th and early 21st century.[2]
Samuel G. Armistead | |
---|---|
Born | Samuel Gordon Armistead August 21, 1927 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Died | August 7, 2013 85) Davis, California, U.S. | (aged
Occupation(s) | ethnographer, linguist, folklorist, Historian, Professor and critic of literature |
Notable work | El romancero judeo-español en el Archivo Menéndez Pidal, Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews, Bibliografías del romancero oral, La tradición épica de las "Mocedades de Rodrigo" |
Samuel Gordon Armistead was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[2][3][4] and was raised in Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia.[5] His mother, Elizabeth Tucker Russell Armistead, was a historian and student of foreign languages;[6] and he had, at least, one brother, Harry Armistead.[7] He came from a family of lawyers and bankers.[6] As a teenager, Armistead suffered an accident with explosives that caused the loss of an eye and some fingers.[3]
He graduated from Penn Charter School in 1945. Afterwards he spent six months in the U.S. Merchant Marine and traveled to France and the Caribbean.[2] Guided by his desire to learn Spanish (the language having attracted him since his adolescence[2]), he lived in Cuba,[3][6] where he had relatives and friends, for several seasons, studying[6] and perfecting [2] his Spanish.[2][6] His stay in Cuba also whetted his appetite for Hispanic literature and culture.[6]
Beginning in the fall of 1945 he studied Spanish literature at Princeton University, receiving his doctorate in Spanish literature and Romance languages in 1955 [2][6][8] with a thesis entitled "La gesta de las mocedades de Rodrigo: Reflections of a Lost Epic Poem in the Cronica de los Reyes de Castilla and the Cronica General de 1344", written under the direction of Américo Castro.[6]
By this time he had begun his teaching career at Princeton (1953–1955).[3] Ultimately he became a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) (1956 - 1967), Purdue University in Indiana, (1967 - 1968), the University of Pennsylvania (1968 - 1982),[2] and the University of California, Davis,[2][5] where he taught [5] from 1982 until his death in 2013.[2]
In 1957, Armistead initiated a collaborative project to collect, edit and study the massive body of Hispanic oral literature from a comparative literature perspective.[8] He worked closely with another eminent Hispanist scholar, Joseph H. Silverman (1924–1989), and the musicologist Israel J. Katz (born 1930), with both of whom he developed an extensive body of work that focused primarily on the oral literature of the Sephardic communities of Morocco and the East. He also worked closely with Hispanist Manuel da Costa Fontes on studies focusing especially on the oral traditions of Portugal and Brazil.[2]
Beginning in 1975, Sam Armistead conducted a field study on the Hispanic linguistics of Spanish colonial communities in Louisiana, communities that have existed in that state since the 18th century and still do. The book he published from that study is The Spanish Tradition in Louisiana (1992). More recently he was engaged in researching additional aspects of Louisiana Spanish and its oral literature.[9]
Between 2000 and 2002 he was co-chair of the Departments of Spanish and Classics at the University of California, Davis.[5] In 2003 he published a six-volume collection of Portuguese traditional romances from the Azores Islands, and he was at work on subsequent volumes.[9] at the time of his death. He retired in 2010 from UC Davis,[3] as professor emeritus.
Armistead died on August 7, 2013, at 85 years old, in Davis, California, due to complications from surgery.[5]
His studies were especially focused on medieval Spanish language and literature,[2][3] Hispanic folk literature, comparative literature and folklore.[2] He studied ballads of Spain and North Africa.[3]
He excelled also in his studies of minority and archaic (but still existing) languages, such as the Spanish language of the Isleño communities in Louisiana[2][3] and, especially, the Sephardic Jews' language, Ladino.[2]
Armistead was author of a multi-volume series concerning the traditional literature of the Sephardic Jews and is author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of over twenty books and several hundred articles on medieval Spanish literature, modern Hispanic oral literature, and comparative literature.[9]
His research fields that have had special impact include early poetry, medieval history, Hispanic dialectology, the Spanish epic and Romance, old and traditional. He conducted numerous field surveys on the language and oral literature of the Sephardic communities of Morocco, the Middle East, rural communities in Portugal, Spain and Israel, and several sites in the United States.[2][9]
In addition, he performed pioneering studies on various genres of Hispanic oral tradition, such as the kharjas, riddles, the paremeología and folktales.[6]
Armistead spent his last years in Northern California.[10] He was married for some time with Maria del Pilar Valcarcel-Calderon. After his divorce, he married Annie Laurie Meltzoff,[5] a yoga instructor.[7]
His books, written either in English or in Spanish, are:[2]
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