"An exhaustive, clear-eyed biography of a sometime folklorist, rather than a study of folklore itself. Gershon Legman, who died in 1999, was a mainly independent scholar who spent his life fascinated by--obsessed with, might be more accurate--jokes, sex, and origami, contributing significantly to their respective literatures" --<i>Folklore</i> "<i>Dirty Jokes and Bawdy Songs</i> is the product of extensive research: interviews with Legman's family (most notably his widow Judith), and his extensive network of correspondents; and investigations into his archives in France and at the Kinsey Institute in Bloomington, Indiana. Her account of Legman's life and work is absorbing; she is generous but also judicious. She uncovers his blind spots and self-delusions." --<i>Journal of American Folklore</i> "Davis is throughout strikingly patient with and sympathetic toward her difficult subject. . . <i>Dirty Jokes and Bawdy Songs</i> is in every way an excellent work--for its meticulous research, its well-organized and clearly written prose, and, most of all, for its generosity of spirit. Legman was an insistently offensive presence, a difficult, even impossible man to like, despite his obvious accomplishments." --<i>Arkansas Historical Quarterly</i> "This book is both a highly entertaining biography of a colourful iconoclast and the tragic story of a scholar <i>manquÉ</i>. Susan Davis tells Legman's extraordinary story with great brio, sympathy, and critical distance." --<i>European Journal of Humor Research</i> "This new biography is a worthwhile addition to the would-be discipline of folkloristics. . . . Using a trove of unpublished or difficult-to-access resources, Susan G. Davis constructs a detailed account of the career of Gershon Legman." --<i>Journal of Folklore Research</i> "A more difficult subject is hard to imagine-a self-taught, little-known, irascible scholar who with little support and great opposition delved into some of the darkest corners of culture. Yet this remarkable and utterly engaging biography is the epic story of an unlikely hero as well as a lesson in just how much one person can accomplish in one lifetime. It also evokes an era, one uncomfortably like our own, in which scholars, theologians, politicians, and police wrestle with the unresolved issues of love and death."--John Szwed, author of <i>Billie Holiday: The Musician and the Myth</i> "A vigorous. . . intellectual biography of [Legman's] peculiar, relentless career." --<i>Times Literary Supplement</i>