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Jamaica Anansi Stories. Illustrated
Coles
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Jamaica Anansi Stories. Illustrated in Ottawa, ON
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Current price: $0.99


By None
Jamaica Anansi Stories. Illustrated in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $0.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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Martha Warren Beckwith’s Jamaica Anansi Stories is a landmark collection of Afro-Caribbean folklore that brings to life the mischievous, clever, and enduring figure of Anansi the spider. First published in 1924, this scholarly yet accessible work is the result of Beckwith’s extensive fieldwork in Jamaica, where she recorded dozens of traditional tales, riddles, songs, and proverbs from local storytellers, preserving a rich oral heritage deeply rooted in African and Creole culture. Anansi, a trickster figure inherited from West African folklore, is the heart of the collection. These stories—sometimes humorous, sometimes cautionary—highlight Anansi’s cunning nature as he outsmarts enemies, deceives friends, and occasionally suffers the consequences of his schemes. The tales reflect everyday village life, moral dilemmas, and communal values, all told in the vivid, expressive Jamaican dialect that Beckwith faithfully transcribed. In addition to the stories themselves, Beckwith provides an in-depth introduction and commentary on the origins of Anansi lore, its transformation through the Caribbean diaspora, and its significance in Jamaican society. She also includes valuable notes on the linguistic and musical aspects of the traditions, making the book a rich interdisciplinary resource for folklorists, anthropologists, and students of African diasporic cultures. Jamaica Anansi Stories remains a foundational work in folklore studies and an essential preservation of African-Caribbean storytelling. It celebrates the resilience of oral tradition, the creative power of language, and the enduring legacy of Anansi—the spider who weaves his stories across generations.
Martha Warren Beckwith’s Jamaica Anansi Stories is a landmark collection of Afro-Caribbean folklore that brings to life the mischievous, clever, and enduring figure of Anansi the spider. First published in 1924, this scholarly yet accessible work is the result of Beckwith’s extensive fieldwork in Jamaica, where she recorded dozens of traditional tales, riddles, songs, and proverbs from local storytellers, preserving a rich oral heritage deeply rooted in African and Creole culture. Anansi, a trickster figure inherited from West African folklore, is the heart of the collection. These stories—sometimes humorous, sometimes cautionary—highlight Anansi’s cunning nature as he outsmarts enemies, deceives friends, and occasionally suffers the consequences of his schemes. The tales reflect everyday village life, moral dilemmas, and communal values, all told in the vivid, expressive Jamaican dialect that Beckwith faithfully transcribed. In addition to the stories themselves, Beckwith provides an in-depth introduction and commentary on the origins of Anansi lore, its transformation through the Caribbean diaspora, and its significance in Jamaican society. She also includes valuable notes on the linguistic and musical aspects of the traditions, making the book a rich interdisciplinary resource for folklorists, anthropologists, and students of African diasporic cultures. Jamaica Anansi Stories remains a foundational work in folklore studies and an essential preservation of African-Caribbean storytelling. It celebrates the resilience of oral tradition, the creative power of language, and the enduring legacy of Anansi—the spider who weaves his stories across generations.

















