Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before...

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Native American Trickster Tales

Transcript of Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before...

Page 1: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Native American Trickster Tales

Page 2: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Oral Tradition

Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority

of human experience recorded via memorized tales.

The Iliad and the Odyssey, two of the oldest stories in the Western world, transmitted orally long before they were written down.

Page 3: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Myths for Life

“Myth in its living, primitive form is not merely a story told but a reality lived.”

–Bronislaw Malinowski

Page 4: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Myth

From the Greek word mythos, literally an explanation couched in story form that attempts to explain all the fundamental, important questions of human existence.

Page 5: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Archetypes

Trickster tales are archetypal, embodying primal patterns that are widely applicable to many human beings, in many times and places.

Native Americans talk about beginning time again and again in their tales.

Page 6: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Native American Concepts

Earth and Nature as living and acting forces

Pantheistic: everything is a part of God; nature, God, and the world are all one.

Created and creator not separate All are connected

Characters often include animals and plants

Page 7: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

European Contrast To those used to patterns of European fairy

tales and folktales, Indian legends often seem chaotic, inconsistent, or incomplete. Plots seem to travel at their own speed, defying convention and at times doing away completely with recognizable beginnings and endings.

Characters of the myths also change greatly from myth to myth: Coyote is a powerful creator one moment, a sniveling coward the next.

Page 8: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Additional Contrasts

Infants display alarming talents or powers. Births and deaths alternate as fast as

night and day. To apply Western logic to these tales is

impossible and unnecessary: the native tales are not intended to be single self-contained units; they are incomplete episodes connected in a chain or a progression of tales that travels back into a tribe’s traditions.

Page 9: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Regional Variations

Legends vary according to a people’s way of life, the geography, the climate, the food they eat and how they obtain it.

The Plains nomadic buffalo hunters tell stories very different from the Eastern forest dwellers.

Page 10: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Regional Variations, II

To the Southwestern planters and harvesters, the coming of corn and the changing of seasons are primal concerns, while the sea people of the Northwest are concerned with ocean monsters, swift harpooners, and powerful boat builders.

Likewise, the cultures overlap and influence each other.

Page 11: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Common Themes and Motifs

Despite their variations, a common theme binds the tales together–a concern with fundamental issues about the world in which humans live.

We encounter again and again in a spectrum of forms, the story of the children of the sun, the twin brothers who bring culture, perpetual destruction and recreation, heroes and tricksters: motifs.

Page 12: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Myths and Culture

The mythological cultures of the tribes also contain influences of history and the particular experiences of each tribe.

By moving these often cataclysmic events into the realm of myth, the storyteller can at once celebrate, mourn, and honor the past… and hope for a time the great heroes may return to their people, restoring them to glory.

Page 13: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Origin of the Term “Trickster”

Trickster is the term first used by Franz Boas in the late 19th century to describe a mythic creature who appears in the oral tales of the peoples of Native America.

Native Americans don’t use the term Trickster at all.

Origin of term not important. Inner psychological manifestations of an

outward physical state.

Page 14: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Trickster Archetype

Purpose: To inform, to guide, or to explain. Little distinguishment is made between

animals and humans, the natural and the supernaturalCoyote, rabbit, hare, raven, jay, and wolverine

are animal names for human, temporal experiences that are archetypal

Page 15: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Three Purposes of Trickster Tales Entertain Teach appropriate behavior, i.e., don’t do

as the trickster does Explain (etiological function): why reality is

soHow the leopard got its spotsWhy the magpie steals

Page 16: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Native American Trickster

The “trickster” is different in European literature. Usually human form

Native American trickster is not always the prankster or jokester

Often the creator of: the earth evolution (through his treachery) transforming the world / earth the trickster’s morals often conflict

Page 17: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Trickster Is the Spark

Scandalous Very highly sexed, often

sexual misconduct Disgusts Amuses Shifting shapes Outwitting the powerful Pranks Disrupts Humiliates

Page 18: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Questions Addressed by Tales

1. How did the universe come to be?

2. Why am I here?

3. What is my purpose?

4. How should I live?

5. Where am I going?

Page 19: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Trickster Today

Wile E. Coyote and Bugs Bunny

Jim Carrey in The Mask

Page 20: Native American Trickster Tales. Oral Tradition Trickster tales an example of oral tradition. Before the invention of writing, the majority of human experience.

Sources

http://www.pittstate.edu/engl/nichols/coyote.html http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/oal/oaltoc.htm Erdoes, Richard and Alfonso Ortiz, eds. American Indian

Trickster Tales. New York: Penguin Books, 1998.