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Mules and Men and Messiahs: Continuity in Yoruba Divination Verses and African American Folktales
by
Washington, Teresa N.
in
African American literature
/ African Americans
/ African culture
/ American literature
/ Analysis
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Authors
/ Cognitive problems, arts and sciences, folk traditions, folklore
/ Comparative analysis
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ Deities
/ Divination
/ Divinity
/ Ethnic Studies
/ Ethnology
/ Etiquette
/ Folk tales
/ Folklore
/ Folkloristics
/ Hurston, Zora Neale
/ Hurston, Zora Neale (1891-1960)
/ Identity
/ Influences
/ Literary criticism
/ Literature and folk literature
/ Morrison, Toni (1931-2019)
/ Naylor, Gloria
/ Oral tradition
/ Oral traditions
/ Oral/folk literature
/ Petry, Ann (1908-1997)
/ Politics
/ Portrayals
/ Prophecies
/ Social aspects
/ Spirituality
/ Storytelling
/ Yoruba language
/ Yoruba literature
2012
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Mules and Men and Messiahs: Continuity in Yoruba Divination Verses and African American Folktales
by
Washington, Teresa N.
in
African American literature
/ African Americans
/ African culture
/ American literature
/ Analysis
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Authors
/ Cognitive problems, arts and sciences, folk traditions, folklore
/ Comparative analysis
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ Deities
/ Divination
/ Divinity
/ Ethnic Studies
/ Ethnology
/ Etiquette
/ Folk tales
/ Folklore
/ Folkloristics
/ Hurston, Zora Neale
/ Hurston, Zora Neale (1891-1960)
/ Identity
/ Influences
/ Literary criticism
/ Literature and folk literature
/ Morrison, Toni (1931-2019)
/ Naylor, Gloria
/ Oral tradition
/ Oral traditions
/ Oral/folk literature
/ Petry, Ann (1908-1997)
/ Politics
/ Portrayals
/ Prophecies
/ Social aspects
/ Spirituality
/ Storytelling
/ Yoruba language
/ Yoruba literature
2012
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Mules and Men and Messiahs: Continuity in Yoruba Divination Verses and African American Folktales
by
Washington, Teresa N.
in
African American literature
/ African Americans
/ African culture
/ American literature
/ Analysis
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Authors
/ Cognitive problems, arts and sciences, folk traditions, folklore
/ Comparative analysis
/ Criticism and interpretation
/ Deities
/ Divination
/ Divinity
/ Ethnic Studies
/ Ethnology
/ Etiquette
/ Folk tales
/ Folklore
/ Folkloristics
/ Hurston, Zora Neale
/ Hurston, Zora Neale (1891-1960)
/ Identity
/ Influences
/ Literary criticism
/ Literature and folk literature
/ Morrison, Toni (1931-2019)
/ Naylor, Gloria
/ Oral tradition
/ Oral traditions
/ Oral/folk literature
/ Petry, Ann (1908-1997)
/ Politics
/ Portrayals
/ Prophecies
/ Social aspects
/ Spirituality
/ Storytelling
/ Yoruba language
/ Yoruba literature
2012
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Mules and Men and Messiahs: Continuity in Yoruba Divination Verses and African American Folktales
Journal Article
Mules and Men and Messiahs: Continuity in Yoruba Divination Verses and African American Folktales
2012
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Overview
Zora Neale Hurston’s Mules and Men reveals that African Americans were able to revise, restructure, and reformulate African orature to fit their social, political, and spiritual needs. This study examines the transformation of Yoruba ese Ifá (Ifá divination verses) into folktales and analyzes the similarities and divergences in the content and characters of the orature. This essay highlights the subtle ways that African Americans politicized and revolutionized the ese Ifá to protect the verses’ wisdom and facilitate their proliferation. The revised ese Ifá, disguised as innocuous folktales, were central to the formation of the African American worldview because they reminded dislocated Africans that divinity was not restricted to an invisible entity or controlled by a select few but was both an inheritance and an imperative essential for liberation and self-actualization.
Publisher
University of Illinois Press,American Folklore Society,American Folklore Society, Inc
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