Mother Wit from Laughing Barrel

Mother Wit from Laughing Barrel
Title Mother Wit from Laughing Barrel PDF eBook
Author Alan Dundes
Publisher Univ. Press of Mississippi
Pages 704
Release 1973
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9781617034329

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Mother Wit from the Laughing Barrel

Mother Wit from the Laughing Barrel
Title Mother Wit from the Laughing Barrel PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages
Release 1981
Genre African Americans
ISBN

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Working Cures

Working Cures
Title Working Cures PDF eBook
Author Sharla M. Fett
Publisher Univ of North Carolina Press
Pages 310
Release 2002
Genre Medical
ISBN 9780807853788

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Working Cures explores black health under slavery showing how herbalism, conjuring, midwifery and other African American healing practices became arts of resistance in the antebellum South and invoked conflicts.

African American Folk Healing

African American Folk Healing
Title African American Folk Healing PDF eBook
Author Stephanie Mitchem
Publisher NYU Press
Pages 199
Release 2007-07
Genre Health & Fitness
ISBN 0814757316

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Cure a nosebleed by holding a silver quarter on the back of the neck. Treat an earache with sweet oil drops. Wear plant roots to keep from catching colds. Within many African American families, these kinds of practices continue today, woven into the fabric of black culture, often communicated through women. Such folk practices shape the concepts about healing that are diffused throughout African American communities and are expressed in myriad ways, from faith healing to making a mojo. Stephanie Y. Mitchem presents a fascinating study of African American healing. She sheds light on a variety of folk practices and traces their development from the time of slavery through the Great Migrations. She explores how they have continued into the present and their relationship with alternative medicines. Through conversations with black Americans, she demonstrates how herbs, charms, and rituals continue folk healing performances. Mitchem shows that these practices are not simply about healing; they are linked to expressions of faith, delineating aspects of a holistic epistemology and pointing to disjunctures between African American views of wellness and illness and those of the culture of institutional medicine.

Every Tub Must Sit on Its Own Bottom

Every Tub Must Sit on Its Own Bottom
Title Every Tub Must Sit on Its Own Bottom PDF eBook
Author Deborah G. Plant
Publisher University of Illinois Press
Pages 232
Release 1995
Genre African American philosophy
ISBN 9780252021831

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In a ground-breaking study of Zora Neale Hurston, Deborah Plant takes issue with current notions of Hurston as a feminist and earlier impressions of her as an intellectual lightweight who disregarded serious issues of race in American culture. Instead, Plant calls Hurston a "writer of resistance" who challenged the politics of domination both in her life and in her work. One of the great geniuses of the Harlem Renaissance, Hurston stands out as a strong voice for African American women. Her anthropological inquiries as well as her evocative prose provide today's readers with a rich history of African American folk culture - a folk culture through which Hurston expressed her personal and political strategy of resistance and self-empowerment. Through readings of Hurston's fiction and autobiographical writings, Plant offers one of the first book-length discussions of Hurston's personal philosophy of individualism and self-reliance. From a discussion of Hurston's preacher father and influential mother, whose guiding philosophy is reflected in the title of this book, to the influence of Spinoza and Nietzsche, Plant puts into perspective the driving forces behind Hurston's powerful prose.

Songs about Work

Songs about Work
Title Songs about Work PDF eBook
Author Archie Green
Publisher Indiana University Press
Pages 378
Release 1993
Genre Music
ISBN 9781879407053

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These essays offer striking portraits of working environments where song arose in response to prevailing conditions. Included are the protest blues of African American levee workers, the corridos of Chicano farm workers, and the European songs of immigrant lumber workers in the Midwest.

The Epic Trickster in American Literature

The Epic Trickster in American Literature
Title The Epic Trickster in American Literature PDF eBook
Author Gregory E. Rutledge
Publisher Routledge
Pages 461
Release 2013-04-26
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1136194827

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Just as Africa and the West have traditionally fit into binaries of Darkness/Enlightenment, Savage/Modern, Ugly/Beautiful, and Ritual/Art, among others, much of Western cultural production rests upon the archetypal binary of Trickster/Epic, with trickster aesthetics and commensurate cultural forms characterizing Africa. Challenging this binary and the exceptionalism that underlies anti-hegemonic efforts even today, this book begins with the scholarly foundations that mapped out African trickster continuities in the United States and excavated the aesthetics of traditional African epic performances. Rutledge locates trickster-like capacities within the epic hero archetype (the "epic trickster" paradigm) and constructs an Homeric Diaspora, which is to say that the modern Homeric performance foundation lies at an absolute time and distance away from the ancient storytelling performance needed to understand the cautionary aesthetic inseparable from epic potential. As traditional epic performances demonstrate, unchecked epic trickster dynamism anticipates not only brutal imperialism and creative diversity, but the greatest threat to everyone, an eco-apocalypse. Relying upon the preeminent scholarship on African-American trickster-heroes, traditional African heroic performances, and cultural studies approaches to Greco-Roman epics, Rutledge traces the epic trickster aesthetic through three seminal African-American novels keenly attuned to the American Homeric Diaspora: Charles Chesnutt’s The Marrow of Tradition, Richard Wright’s Native Son, and Toni Morrison’s Beloved.