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⋙ PDF Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris



Download As PDF : Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

Download PDF  Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit

Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

I was thrilled to find UNCLE REMUS AND BRER RABBIT available for my Kindle. I immediately obtained it and started reading, returning to my childhood and being just as enchanted as I was as a three-year-old when I first heard the stories.

Joel Chandler Harris, in writing his stories, recreated the dialect he remembered when he lived at a plantation in Georgia in 1862. During the four years he spent there, he was a frequent visitor to the slave quarters, feeling comfortable and gaining love and respect for the African-American people living there. He patterned Uncle Remus after a couple of elderly black storytellers and went on to write innumerable stories about the adventures of a pesky rabbit and his animal friends and enemies. Some were as the elders told them, others he created. Although sometimes hard to read, his stories are well-suited for improvisation by the reader and children seem as entranced by the language as they are about the characters and their adventures.

Not all has gone well for Harris or his stories. Some black activists have declared his stories to be stereotypical and biased with images of an idyllic slave life. Others claim he purloined the stories to profit from them. Still others have praised his works as being the only real remaining historical records of African animal tales and a welcome addition to African-American folklore.

He was a loner, self-conscious about his appearance, afflicted with alcoholism, and, despite an aversion for the African-American slavery condition, sometimes stubbornly defended it as being a kindly family grouping in some situations. To me, my children, and grandchildren the stories are wondrous adventures of trickery, tomfoolery, and pastoral animal existence that promote family closeness as we relive them together. In contradiction to naysayers, not a thought goes out to the promotion of inhumanity we all know existed during the slavery period of our history.

That brings me to the Walt Disney movie "Song of the South" and its assignment to the banned list. This gorgeously produced 1946 musical depicted a kindly black gentleman who loved all children, regardless of their race, and wanted to tell his stories to them. Wonderful animated adventures in beautiful color bring the animals to life and sprightly tunes are easy for children to remember and sing. But certain factions object to background scenes of peaceful labor in the fields, a gentle portrayal of family life, and Uncle Remus's stereotypical dialect and were able to get it removed from United States viewership. In my mind it's horrendous to lose this glorious piece of entertainment with its accompanying record of folk tales that are now slowly fading away because of inaccessibility. Surely there is some type of cooperative editing that can be applied to remove objectionable background material while keeping the stories alive.

But, although there's a connection, I'm not reviewing the movie. I'm reviewing the book and its collection of stories. They are remarkable and you really should read them again.

Schuyler T Wallace
Author of TIN LIZARD TALES

Product details

  • File Size 370 KB
  • Print Length 66 pages
  • Publication Date May 29, 2016
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B01GDBQN82

Read  Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

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Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris Reviews


This collection is a classic. As a member of AMAZON PRIME, this book was FREE. Click, download and read.

If you are phobic about the "N" word, you've probably already burned your paper copy. This charming collection is no more or less offensive than Huckleberry Fin.

I can't think of any reason not to add this E-book to your library right now!
This book is a fun way to bring back childhood memories and share them with your children and grandchildren. The language is unique.
I bought this book thinking it would be a good story book to read my grand kids.
The illustrations are pretty good but the dialogue is hard to translate on the fly.
I understand that Harris was trying to capture the dialect of a turn of the century negro,perhaps he succeeded too well.
It's not that the book is hard to understand, it's just hard to translate into any semblance of today's english before the little guys I am attempting to entertain become bored.
These are the very same stories I remember my long gone Mother reading to me as a kid. Lots of great memories of great stories that always had lessons to teach little children. Loved them then, love them now!!!!!
I just received the download, not ten minutes ago, and obviously haven't read it but am disappointed that there are no pictures. The remembrance I have from 70+ years ago involved the rabbit being thrown into a briar patch and I was looking forward to seeing that again.

I'll rate based on memory, 4 out of 5 due to the lack of pictures. I looked up the paid version and it has the pictures but I also glanced at a couple of pages of the story and I'm going to drop my rating to a 3. In my youth the language was understandable but when I attempted to read the story to my grandchildren it required translation which was distracting for all parties.
I grew up listening to these stories and they have a special place in my soul. In 1971 at 5 years old, I distinctly remember getting into a little trouble for disagreeing with the, "slow & steady wins the race" kindergarten version of the tortoise & the hare. Have no fear; getting in trouble didn't change my mind about how the story REALLY happened. Ha ha ha! The Uncle Remus version is better AND funnier! These stories can be extremely difficult to read because of the grammar but PLEASE give them a chance. Uncle Remus made it clear that the good guys don't always win and the bad guys don't always get caught. Those are lessons a lot of folks live a lifetime without learning- plus these stories have talking critters! BONUS!
Don't throw ME in the briar patch Brer Fox! Yep, I heard some, but not all, of these stories growing up in the deep south. Along the lines of Aesop's Tales, as Uncle Remus was an old man when freed from slavery by President Lincoln. Lot's of good lessons to be learned, and readily remembered, because Uncle Remus cuts through the chaff to get to the wheat without much effort at all. The language will be difficult for those that don't have a knack for the Old South Dialects, but that makes it all the more interesting. It is not the original, original, but close enough to provide some real enjoyment in the reading. This is a departure from all things high-tech, and a great reminder of how folks used to look at things, remember important lessons for life, and view their world. Not really an authentic griot way, but derived and descended from that mode of sharing wisdom - not everyone will get it, but then, who says they have to. It's well worth the price, the book is of good quality, from Houghton Mifflin, about -310- pages, ISBN 0-395-06800-25-87310, authored by the authentic Joel Chandler Harris, illustrated by the talented A.B.Frost (original illustrations). "I aint soshatin wid dem w'at lays down on de groun' en plays dead w'en dar's a free fight gwine on [Brer Coon distances himself from cowardy Brer Possum - who sez] - I wuz feared. Dat's a mighty likely tale, sezee [Brer Coon] w'en Mr Dog aint mo'n tech you fo' you keel over; en lay dar stiff - sezee."!
I was thrilled to find UNCLE REMUS AND BRER RABBIT available for my . I immediately obtained it and started reading, returning to my childhood and being just as enchanted as I was as a three-year-old when I first heard the stories.

Joel Chandler Harris, in writing his stories, recreated the dialect he remembered when he lived at a plantation in Georgia in 1862. During the four years he spent there, he was a frequent visitor to the slave quarters, feeling comfortable and gaining love and respect for the African-American people living there. He patterned Uncle Remus after a couple of elderly black storytellers and went on to write innumerable stories about the adventures of a pesky rabbit and his animal friends and enemies. Some were as the elders told them, others he created. Although sometimes hard to read, his stories are well-suited for improvisation by the reader and children seem as entranced by the language as they are about the characters and their adventures.

Not all has gone well for Harris or his stories. Some black activists have declared his stories to be stereotypical and biased with images of an idyllic slave life. Others claim he purloined the stories to profit from them. Still others have praised his works as being the only real remaining historical records of African animal tales and a welcome addition to African-American folklore.

He was a loner, self-conscious about his appearance, afflicted with alcoholism, and, despite an aversion for the African-American slavery condition, sometimes stubbornly defended it as being a kindly family grouping in some situations. To me, my children, and grandchildren the stories are wondrous adventures of trickery, tomfoolery, and pastoral animal existence that promote family closeness as we relive them together. In contradiction to naysayers, not a thought goes out to the promotion of inhumanity we all know existed during the slavery period of our history.

That brings me to the Walt Disney movie "Song of the South" and its assignment to the banned list. This gorgeously produced 1946 musical depicted a kindly black gentleman who loved all children, regardless of their race, and wanted to tell his stories to them. Wonderful animated adventures in beautiful color bring the animals to life and sprightly tunes are easy for children to remember and sing. But certain factions object to background scenes of peaceful labor in the fields, a gentle portrayal of family life, and Uncle Remus's stereotypical dialect and were able to get it removed from United States viewership. In my mind it's horrendous to lose this glorious piece of entertainment with its accompanying record of folk tales that are now slowly fading away because of inaccessibility. Surely there is some type of cooperative editing that can be applied to remove objectionable background material while keeping the stories alive.

But, although there's a connection, I'm not reviewing the movie. I'm reviewing the book and its collection of stories. They are remarkable and you really should read them again.

Schuyler T Wallace
Author of TIN LIZARD TALES
Ebook PDF  Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit eBook Joel Chandler Harris

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