trickster tale Article

trickster tale summary

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trickster tale, In oral traditions worldwide, a story of deceit, magic, or violence perpetrated by a supernatural protagonist (usually an anthropomorphized animal). The trickster is both creator god and innocent fool, evil destroyer and childlike prankster; he provides lessons in culturally appropriate behaviour, usually in a backhanded way by failing utterly at a task or by swindling a gullible but hard-working victim. Coyote, the trickster of tales from American Indian peoples in California, the Great Basin, the Plateau, and the Plains, is one of the most widely known. In the Pacific Northwest, the trickster is Raven, Mink, or Bluejay; in the Southwest, Spider; and in the Eastern Woodlands he is Hare. Many African peoples also have tales about tricksters (notably Hare, Spider, and Tortoise), which enslaved Africans brought to the New World. Other tricksters include Loki (Europe), the Twins (Amazonia), Maui-tiki-tiki (Oceania), and Fox (Europe, South America, and Japan).