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  2. Anansi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi

    Another popular story tells of how Anansi once tried to hoard all of the world's wisdom in a pot (in some versions a calabash). [36] In this story, [37] Anansi decides to gather all the wisdom he can find and keep it in a safe place inside of a pot all to himself. Anansi then decides to hide the pot from other people by placing it in a tree ...

  3. A Story, a Story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Story,_a_Story

    A Story, a Story is a children's picture book written and illustrated by Gail E. Haley that retells the African tale of how the trickster Anansi obtained stories from the Sky God to give to the children of the earth.

  4. Jamaica Anansi Stories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaica_Anansi_Stories

    Jamaica Anansi Stories is a book by Martha Warren Beckwith published in 1924. It is a collection of folklore , riddles and transcriptions of folk music , all involving the trickster Anansi , gathered from Jamaicans of African descent.

  5. Anansi the Spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi_the_Spider

    Anansi the Spider may refer to: Anansi, a trickster in the folk tales of the Ashanti people of Ghana; Anansi (Static Shock), a hero in the cartoon series Static Shock;

  6. Ti Malice and Bouki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ti_Malice_and_Bouki

    It is the manipulation of this greed that allows Ti Malice to often get the best of Uncle Bouki. These characters are said to be a split of Anansi, the trickster character of the Ashanti of Ghana. Bouki and Malice have their origins in African oral traditions. In Senegal and neighbouring countries, these two characters appear in animal form.

  7. Martha Warren Beckwith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Warren_Beckwith

    Jamaica Anansi Stories. Beckwith conducted research in a variety of European and Middle Eastern countries but her most extensive research focused on Hawaii and Polynesia, Jamaica, and the Sioux tribes of North and South Dakota. Beckwith carried out fieldwork in Jamaica between 1919 and 1922. [3]

  8. Osebo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osebo

    Anansi captures Osebo by digging a pit in his favorite path. When Osebo falls into the trap, Anansi offers his help by lowering a branch and offering it to Osebo. Anansi tells Osebo to tie his tail to the branch, and he does so because his trust on Anansi. However, the branch is actually a hunting trap and he is caught, killed, and skinned by ...

  9. Mechanics and Crafts of the People of Annam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanics_and_Crafts_of...

    The Mechanics and Crafts of the People of Annam (French: Technique du peuple Annamite; Vietnamese: Kỹ thuật của người An Nam, chữ Nôm: 技術𧵑𠊛安南) is a multi-volume colonial manuscript created by Henri Joseph Oger (1885-1936), [1] a colonial official who commissioned artists to record the culture of the Annamese (Vietnamese) in Hanoi and the area around it during the ...