Monday, January 31, 2022

African Diaspora at Internet Archive: African American Folktales

Like with the Virginia Hamilton book from yesterday, today's author, Roger Abrahams, is someone who will be familiar to readers from the African phase of this project too. Earlier I wrote about Abrahams's book African Folktales: Traditional Stories of the Black World, and here is today's book: African American Folktales: Stories from Black Traditions in the New World, which is the best anthology IMO for learning about African storytelling traditions in the Americas.


The book contains 107 stories, organized into different sections as follows (these are links to the specific story pages at Internet Archive):

PART I. Getting Things Started: How the World Got Put Together That Way

PART II. Minding Somebody Else’s Business and Sometimes Making It Your Own

PART III. Getting a Comeuppance: How (and How Not) to Act Stories
What Makes Brer Wasp Have a Short Patience / Between the Fiddler and the Dancer / Being Greedy Chokes Anansi / The Doings and Undoings of the Dogoshes / Spreading Fingers for Friendship / Don’t Shoot Me, Dyer, Don’t Shoot Me / Little Eight John / The Poor Man and the Snake / The Little Bird Grows / Tricking All the Kings / The Feast on the Mountain and the Feast under the Water / Hide Anger until Tomorrow / Buying Two Empty Hands / Cutta Cord-La / Brer Bear’s Grapevine / A Foolish Mother / Old Granny Grinny Granny / You Never Know What Trouble Is until It Finds You / He Pays for the Provisions / The Cunning Cockroach / Little Boy-Bear Nurses the Alligator Children / The Girl Made of Butter / Poppa Stole the Deacon’s Bull / The Trouble with Helping Out / The Rooster Goes Away in a Huff

PART IV. How Clever Can You Get? Tales of Trickery and Its Consequences

PART V. The Strong Ones and the Clever: Contests and Confrontations

PART VI. Getting Around Old Master (Most of the Time)

PART VII. In the End, Nonsense

There are notes on all the stories in the back, plus informative introductions to each section, along with a comprehensive bibliography. It's a perfect jumping-off point to learn more about both African American and Caribbean storytelling traditions.

Abrahams is also the author of other important books on African American culture, especially language and storytelling. You can find out more about his long career as a scholar here at Wikipedia. Abrahams died just a few years ago, in 2017; here is his obituary in the New York Times.

Here are just a few of his other books that you can find at Internet Archive:



Meanwhile, if you want a comprehensive overview, just spend some time with Abrahams's African Folktales and African American Folktales, both of which are ready and waiting at the Archive.






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