Uncle Remus

Uncle Remus in Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings: The Folk-Lore of the Old Plantation, 1881
"Old Plantation Play Song", from Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings: The Folk-Lore of the Old Plantation, 1881

Uncle Remus is the fictional title character and narrator of a collection of African-American folktales adapted and compiled by Joel Chandler Harris, published in book form in 1881. A journalist in post-Reconstruction Atlanta, Georgia, Harris produced seven Uncle Remus books. Harris wanted to show that life in the Southern United States was hard and that they struggled a lot. The term that comes along with this is "folk uncanny".[1] Harris wrote these stories to represent the struggle in the Southern United States, and more specifically in the plantations. He did so by introducing tales he had heard and framing them in the plantation context. These stories were written in a dialect that represented the voice of the narrators and their subculture. It is for this choice of framing that his collection has led to controversy.[2]

Structure

Uncle Remus is a collection of animal stories, songs, and oral folklore, collected from southern African Americans. Many of the stories are didactic, much like those of Aesop's Fables and Jean de La Fontaine's stories. Uncle Remus is a kindly old freedman who serves as a storytelling device, passing on the folktales to children gathered around him.

The stories are written in an eye dialect devised by Harris to represent a Deep South Gullah dialect. The genre of stories is the trickster tale. At the time of Harris's publication, his work was praised for its ability to capture plantation Negro dialect.[3]

Br'er Rabbit ("Brother Rabbit") is the main character of the stories, a likable character, prone to tricks and trouble-making, who is often opposed by Br'er Fox and Br'er Bear. In one tale, Br'er Fox constructs a lump of tar and puts clothing on it. When Br'er Rabbit comes along, he addresses the "tar baby" amiably but receives no response. Br'er Rabbit becomes offended by what he perceives as Tar Baby's lack of manners, punches it, and becomes stuck.[4]

Controversy and legacy

The animal stories were conveyed in such a manner that they were not seen as racist by many among the audiences of the time. By the mid-20th century, however, the dialect and the narrator's "old Uncle" stereotype were considered demeaning by many African-American people, reflecting what they considered to be racist and patronizing attitudes toward African-Americans. Providing additional controversy is the stories' context, as they are set on a former slave-owning plantation and portrayed in a passive, even docile, manner. Nevertheless, Harris's work was, according to himself, an accurate account of the stories he heard from the slaves when he worked on a plantation as a young man. He claimed to have listened to, and memorized, the African American animal stories told by Uncle George Terrell, Old Harbert, and Aunt Crissy at the plantation; he wrote them down some years later. He acknowledged his debt to these storytellers in his fictionalized autobiography, On the Plantation (1892). Many of the stories that he recorded have direct equivalents in the African oral tradition.

Harris himself said, in the introduction to Uncle Remus, that he hoped his book would be considered:

...a sympathetic supplement to Mrs. Stowe's [author of Uncle Tom's Cabin] wonderful defense of slavery as it existed in the South. Mrs. Stowe, let me hasten to say, attacked the possibilities of slavery with all the eloquence of genius; but the same genius painted the portrait of the Southern slave-owner, and defended him.[5]

Mark Twain read the Uncle Remus stories to his children, who were awed to meet Harris himself. In his Autobiography Twain describes Harris thus:[6][7]

He was the bashfulest grown person I have ever met. When there were people about he stayed silent, and seemed to suffer until they were gone. But he was lovely, nevertheless; for the sweetness and benignity of the immortal Remus looked out from his eyes, and the graces and sincerities of his character shone in his face.

Twain wrote: "It may be that Jim Wolf was as bashful as Harris. It hardly seems possible...." Jim Wolf is a character from the first humorous story Twain ever told: "Jim Wolf and the Cats".

Adaptations in film and other media

Uncle Remus as portrayed by James Baskett in Song of the South

Comics

An Uncle Remus and His Tales of Br'er Rabbit newspaper strip ran from October 14, 1945 through December 31, 1972.[8]

Films

The stories have inspired at least three feature films:

Music

The song "Uncle Remus" was included on Frank Zappa's album Apostrophe (') (1974). The song co-written by Zappa and keyboardist/vocalist George Duke, tackled the subject of racial relations in America, and is something of a spiritual successor to “Trouble Every Day", a track on Freak Out! (1966) addressing similar issues. "Uncle Remus" is also mentioned as a character in "The Land of Make Believe" by Chuck Mangione (1973).

Different stories within Uncle Remus

Tar Baby is one story that Uncle Remus tells the kids. There are themes within this story. One of the notable themes is conflict, good versus evil and black and white. We see that Brer Rabbit is the good character while Brer Fox is the bad character.[11] There is a struggle of doing right and wrong with Brer Fox who is the villain and Brer Rabbit who is the hero.[11] This was supposed to teach about life for slaves on the plantations and this shows the unsolved conflicts between good and evil. The powerful people having power over the powerless.[11] Another visible element in the Tar Baby story is that Brer Rabbit demands respect from the tar baby, similarly to how the white people demand respect from the slaves. This is basically depicting how the whites demanded the respect of the enslaved people.[11]

References

  1. Jewett,, Chad (2015). ""Being Uncle Remus": The Folk Uncanny and the Remus/Rabbit Archetype in Faulkner's "Was" and The Reivers". Proquest.
  2. Montenyohl, Eric (1986). "The Origins of Uncle Remus". Folklore Forum. 18(2): 136–167.
  3. Clemens, Samuel L. (1883). "Chapter XLVII: 'Uncle Remus' and Mr. Cable". Life on the Mississippi.
  4. "Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings". www.gutenburg.org. 2000-08-01. Retrieved 2010-05-25.
  5. Bernstein, Robin (2011). Racial Innocence: Performing American Childhood from Slavery to Civil Rights. New York: New York University Press. pp. 133–141. Provides more on the relationship between Uncle Remus and Uncle Tom's Cabin.
  6. Mark, Twain (1907). The North American Review - Chapters from My Autobiography. O. Everett. p. 329. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
  7. Twain, Mark (2013). Mark Twain Project :: Literary Works :: Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 2 : an electronic text. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
  8. "Disney’s "Uncle Remus" strips". Hogan's Alley (16). 2009.
  9. Brasch, Walter M. (2000). Brer Rabbit, Uncle Remus and the "Cornfield Journalist": The Tale of Joel Chandler Harris. Mercer University Press. p. 275.
  10. "Child's Play". www.washingtonpost.com. 2006-04-09. Retrieved 2008-08-29.
  11. 1 2 3 4 "The Wonderful Tar-Baby Story Themes - eNotes.com". eNotes. Retrieved 2017-04-21.

Further reading

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