Jamaican song and story - Unknown

Jamaican song and story

Obvious printer errors have been corrected without note.
Alter et idem.
Published for the Folk-Lore Society by DAVID NUTT, 57-59 LONG ACRE LONDON 1907


Mr. Jekyll's delightful collection of tales and songs from Jamaica suggests many interesting problems. It presents to us a network of interwoven strands of European and African origin, and when these have been to some extent disentangled we are confronted with the further question, to which of the peoples of the Dark Continent may the African element be attributed?
The exact relationship between the Negro and Bantu races,—which of them is the original and which the adulterated stock (in other words, whether the adulteration was an improvement or the reverse),—is a subject quite beyond my competence to discuss. It seems certain that the Negro languages (as yet only tentatively classified) are as distinct from the singularly homogeneous and well-defined Bantu family, as Aryan from Semitic. Ibo, at one end of the area, has possible Bantu affinities, which await fuller investigation; the same thing has been conjectured of Bullom and Temne at the other end (Sierra Leone); but these are so slight and as yet so doubtful that they scarcely affect the above estimate.
The difference in West Coast and Bantu folk-tales is not so marked as that between the languages; yet here, too, along with a great deal which the two have in common, we can pick out some features peculiar to each. And Mr. Jekyll's tales, so far as they can be supposed to come from Africa at all, are not Bantu. The name of Annancy alone is enough to tell us that.
But the British West Indies would seem to have been chiefly supplied from Upper Guinea, or the West Coast proper (it really faces south, while Loango, Congo, etc., are the South-West Coast —a point which is sometimes puzzling to the uninitiated). Among the tribes to be found in Jamaica, Mr. Jekyll tells me are the Ibo (Lower Niger), Coromantin (Gold Coast), Hausa, Mandingo, Moko (inland from Calabar), Nago (Yoruba), and Sobo (Lower Niger).

Unknown
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2011-02-26

Темы

Folklore -- Jamaica; Folk songs, English -- Jamaica; Folk music -- Jamaica; Anansi (Legendary character)

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