Sunday, February 24, 2013

Br'er Rabbit In African American Folklore


In African American Folklore Br'er Rabbit is one of the more well known characters. Some were introduced to him in the Uncle Remus stories. His character in folklore is known as the trickster. They can recall on the beget of a god,goddess, or an animal. Usually they will play a trick or disobey normal rules and norms of behavior. Cunning and wit is one of their trademarks.



Southern Beginnings



The stories of Br'er Rabbit were known to slaves in the US. Later a journalist from Georgia named James Chandler Harris detached these stories told from the oral tradition and save them in book create. He aged the dialect spoken at the time. This was post Civil War when it was printed. And the stories told idealized a time that was gone but composed yearned for by white southerners. His book has become a portion of African American Folklore. To this day his retelling of the stories composed bring up attractive debate depending on how one looks at it.



African Connection



Anansi is the name of a trickster whose stories are told in West Africa. There he took on the create of a spider and there are many stories of him playing tricks on others. Those stories are opinion to commence with the Ashanti tribe in Ghana.



Native American Origins



Rabbit/Hare myths were long known to Native Americans in North America and parts of Canada. Primarily the Algonquin tribe with the substantial Hare yarn. Apparently most of the rabbit stories approach from Cherokee folklore. No doubt Cherokee Indians and African slaves came into contact. In many cases intermarried. One can glimpse how the Rabbit folklore stories would morph into Br'er rabbit.



What The Slaves Did with Br'er Rabbit



While Br'er Rabbit played the trickster in African American Folklore he also meant other things. In a sense he represented slaves who weak wit to overcome obstacles and adversaries (white slave owners) . Not always successful but he was a folk hero.


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