Lord became a professor of Slavic and comparative literature at Harvard in 1950. He was later promoted as a full professor there in Classics. He also founded Harvard's Committee on Degrees in Folklore and Mythology, and chaired the college's Department of Folklore and Mythology until his retirement in 1983. His wife Mary Louise Lord completed and edited his manuscript of a posthumous sequel
The Singer Resumes the Tale (published 1995) which further supports and extends Lord's initial conclusions. Lord demonstrated the ways in which various great ancient
epics from Europe and Asia were heirs to a tradition not only of
oral performance, but of
oral composition. Lord studied and made field recordings of South-Slavic heroic epics sung to the
gusle, most notable of poets he worked with was
Avdo Međedović, whose most notable song was
The Wedding of Smailagić Meho. He studied not only Homeric epics, but also
Beowulf,
Gilgamesh, and others. Across these many story traditions he found strong commonalities concerning the oral composition of traditional
storytelling. ==Personal life==