Showing posts with label Spring 09. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring 09. Show all posts

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Week 9 Famous Last Words: Walgreens Vaccine!

So my big news is something that hasn't even happened yet, but is happening on Tuesday: I finally got an appointment for a vaccination (first shot) at Walgreens. My eligibility window here opened on Wednesday and I was banging away at their website day and night trying to get an appointment, and finally, just before shutting down for the night last night, I landed an appointment: March 23, and then April 20. I'm a little worried because that April 20 is the day before my OERxDomains keynote, so I hope I don't get sick with side effects as some people have... but even so, it's worth: I took the appointment slot without even hesitating. My husband has had both shots already (he's over 70), and our best friends here (also both over 70), have had their shots so I am the one who has been holding us back from getting into our routine of cooking together every week....... we haven't done that for over a year now, which just feels impossibly strange. But by the time May 7 rolls around, I'll be two weeks after my second shot, which means immunized, so we can have a big party for the end of the semester, my retirement, and life-back-to-more-or-less-normal for us at least, even though we won't be going out yet. Still, just being able to get together again like we used to is going to feel so good. 

I also made good progress on my Storybook with a TON of research on the San (Bushman) trickster who is Mantis, or Ikaggen. I'm now obsessed with this storytelling tradition, in fact, so I ordered some more books to read. I'm not sure these stories will lend themselves so well to being "tiny tales"... but that's okay: I still want to read and learn all I can about African storytelling traditions, and this is an absolutely beautiful tradition, and with gorgeous art also; this is from the Bleek-Lloyd Archive.


And since it's March 21 today, that means it is exactly one month until the keynote... I need to start working on that now since rushing it at the last minute would not be a good idea: I really want to do a good job with this, not just with the keynote but also some digital materials to go with it.

But now........ it's SPRING. And it's even sort of warm outside, and it's definitely sunny. So I'm going to go walk and listen to music and think about the fact that I'm getting vaccinated next week................. I still can't believe I managed to snag that appointment at last, and I am so happy about that!



Saturday, March 13, 2021

Week 9 Story: The Adventures of Anansi

For this story, I took the story of Anansi and God and turned it into three short 100-word stories. "Anansi" means "Spider" in the Akan language of Ghana, which is where this story comes from. Anansi is also famous in Jamaica and throughout the Caribbean because storytellers from Ghana and other west African cultures, kidnapped as slaves and taken to the Americas, brought their stories with them. You can read some microfiction Anansi stories from the Caribbean here: Tiny Tales of Anansi


God and Anansi Make a Bargain

"I want all stories to be Anansi-stories!" Anansi shouted.
"Agreed," said God, "provided you bring me Bees in a calabash, alive, and Snake, and also Leopard."
Anansi grabbed a calabash and went to where the Bees lived. He sat on the ground, shaking his head. "Yes!" he shouted. "No? Yes! No?"
"What's wrong?" they asked him.
"God says no, you cannot all fit into this calabash," said Anansi, "but I say yes, you can!"
"Yes!" buzzed the Bees. "Yes, we can!" Then they flew into the calabash.
Anansi sealed the calabash and brought it to God.
"Now Snake!" said God.




Anansi and Snake

Anansi grabbed a long stick and sat down outside Snake's hole, muttering loudly. "He is! Or maybe he isn't? He is! Or maybe not?"
Snake slithered out of his hole and asked, "What'sssss wrong, Ananssssssssi?"
"God says you are not as long as this stick," Anansi replied, "but I say you are."
"Of coursssssse I am asssss long as that sssssstick," said Snake. "I'll prove it!"
Snake wiggled along the stick. Then Anansi grabbed Snake's head and tied it to the stick, and also his tail.
Laughing, Anansi ran back to God and gave him Snake.
"Now Leopard!" said God. 




Anansi and Leopard

Anansi prepared a big cage. Then he sewed his eye shut and went to Leopard's den, singing and laughing.
"Why are you so happy?" asked Leopard.
"I sewed my eye shut," said Anansi, "and now I see the most beautiful things. It's magic!"
"Sew my eye shut too!" roared Leopard. "I want to see the beautiful things!"
Anansi sewed one of Leopard's eyes shut.
"It's not working," Leopard growled.
"I'll sew the other eye," said Anansi.
Now Leopard couldn't see anything. Anansi easily trapped him in the cage and took him to God.
That's how all the stories became Anansi-stories!


~ ~ ~


Author's Notes. This quest is one of the most famous African trickster story types. Brer Rabbit goes on a similar quest: Brer Rabbit's Smarts. Sometimes the quest is for stories, like here, or for wisdom, or for a bride, etc.

I added the part about Anansi sewing one eye first and then the other eye based on a similar story about Brer Fox and Brer Rabbit: Rabbit's Eyeball Candy. In the original story, Anansi gets "Tiger" to sew his eyes shut, but there are no tigers in Ghana; the word "Tiger" is used to refer to a big cat, kind of like the way "lion" is used in the phrsae "mountain lion" in English. One of the big cats of Ghana is the leopard, so I used Leopard for this story.

Bibliography. "How We Got the Name Spider Tales" in West African Folktales by William H. Barker and Cecilia Sinclair.

Image sources.

Here is an illustration by Cecilia Sinclair in the book; this depicts Anansi as a man. In the stories, Anansi has a shifting identity: sometimes a god, sometimes a spider, sometimes a man, and sometimes a mixture that is hard to define. This shows Anansi tricking the bees into getting into the jar: