ANANSI STORIES - 13 Anansi Stories from West Africa
A GREAT READ FOR KIDS!
ANANSI or Ahnansi (Ah-nahn-see) “the trickster” is a cunning and intelligent spider and is one of the most important characters of West African and Caribbean folklore. In this volume you will find 13 Anansi tales. Stories like WHY THE JACK-SPANIARD'S WAIST IS SMALL, ANANZI AND THE LION, ANANZI AND QUANQUA, THE EAR OF CORN AND THE TWELVE MEN, THE KING AND THE ANT'S TREE, THE DANCING GANG and many more
The Anansi tales are believed to have originated in the Ashanti tribe in Ghana. (The word Anansi is Akan and means, simply, spider.) They later spread to other Akan groups and then to the West Indies, Suriname, and the Netherlands Antilles. On Curaçao, Aruba, and Bonaire he is known as Nanzi, and his wife as Shi Maria.
He is also known as Ananse, Kwaku Ananse, and Anancy; and in the Southern United States he has evolved into “Aunt Nancy”. He is a spider, but often acts and appears as a man. The story of Anansi is akin to the Coyote or Raven the trickster found in many Native American cultures.
The stories in this short volume were originally, and unusually, an appendix to Popular Tales from the Norse also by Sir George Webbe Dasent. Why he chose to include folklore from Africa and the Caribbean within folklore of the Norse has been forgotten in the sands of time. Abela Publishing has elected to republish these as a volume in their own right as an aide to Edgbarrow School’s fundraising campaign supporting the SOS Children’s Village in Asiakwa, Ghana.
YESTERDAY’S BOOKS raising funds for TODAY’S CHARITIES
BUY THIS AND GET the FREE eBOOK - Folklore, Fairy Tales, Myths, Legends and Other Children's Stories from Around the World - containing 16 free folk and fairy tales