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Lewis Hyde's ambitious and captivating book brings to life the playful and disruptive side of the human imagination embodied in the Trickster mythology. Most at home on the road or at the twilight edge of town, tricksters are consummate boundary-crossers, slipping through keyholes, breaching walls, subverting defense systems. Always out to satisfy their inordinate appetites, lying, cheating, and stealing, tricksters are a great bother to have around, but paradoxically they are also indispensable culture heroes. In North America, Coyote taught the race how to dress, sing, and shoot arrows. In West Africa, Eshu discovered the art of divination so that suffering humans might know the purposes of heaven. In Greece, Hermes the Thief invented the art of sacrifice, the trick of making fire, and even language itself. Hyde revisits these old stories, then holds them up against the life and work of more recent creators: Picasso, John Cage, Maxine Hong Kingston, and others. The old myths say that the gods set out to create an ideal world--but this world, with its complexity and ambiguity, its beauty and its dirt, was Trickster's creation.--Adapted from book jacket. Studies how different kinds of trickster figures are portrayed in the legends and myths of different cultures.… (more)
User reviews
I read most of the book straight through and took a little longer reading the appendixes and re-reading parts of the book. A good read and I"m hoping to track down more of the author's work.
I suspect that this book will frustrate all species of lazy reader because it asks for a sustained, continuous, and thorough reading. All the chapters are rewarding individually, but they are best read sequentially. If you want to be able to look at a table of contents and pick one or two chapters by topic, find a doctoral thesis, or a utilitarian academic monograph.