Trickster

In mythology and folklore, a trickster figure is a god, spirit, person, or anthropomorphic character who exhibits a high degree of knowledge and intelligence, and who uses that knowledge to deceive people or other mythological personages, and who generally violates social conventions. Trickster gods and figures appear in a wide variety of myths and folklore.

Gather 'round the campfire
Folklore
Folklore
Urban legends
Superstition
v - t - e

Examples

Some examples of characters from folklore, mythology, or religion that manifest the trickster archetype include:

  • Anansi the SpiderFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from several West African cultures. Appears in the New World as "Annancy" or "Aunt Nancy".
  • Br'er RabbitFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from African-American folktales, made famous by Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus stories. He too owes much to Anansi.
  • Eris, Greek goddess of strife, also known as Discordia in the Roman religion. Main goddess of Discordianism a trickster-like religion.
  • EshuFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, known in the New World as Exú, from Yoruba mythology.
  • CoyoteFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Plains and West Coast Native American folklore.
  • NanabozhoFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Ojibwe Native American folklore.
  • MauiFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Polynesian mythology.
  • SinbadFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Arabic and Persian folklore.
  • Jacob, from the Hebrew Bible, has many attributes of a trickster figure.
  • HermesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Greek mythology.
  • AutolycusFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Greek mythology.
  • OdysseusFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Greek mythology.
  • LokiFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Norse mythology.
  • Reynard the FoxFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Western Europe.
  • PuckFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from British fairy tales; appears in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • Leprechauns, from Irish fairy lore.
  • NasreddinFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, from Islamic folklore, a Sufi saint in the 13th century.
  • IktomiFile:Wikipedia's W.svg of Lakota tradition.
  • Robin HoodFile:Wikipedia's W.svg of English folklore.
  • Sun WukongFile:Wikipedia's W.svg of Chinese folklore.
  • AzebanFile:Wikipedia's W.svg of Abenaki mythology.

Trickster figures are popular especially among the members of an underclass. The trickster figure turns the tables on bosses, masters, and other oppressive figures. Tricksters are often shape-shifters and are fluid with respect to gender.

Trickster deities

Deities can be trickster figures. In Greek mythology, Hermes is the divine patron of thieves and the inventor of the art of lying, a skill he passed to his disciple Autolycus. The Homeric Hymn to Hermes calls Hermes a god of "many shapes (polytropos), blandly cunning, a robber, a cattle driver, a bringer of dreams, a watcher by night, a thief at the gates, one who was soon to show forth wonderful deeds among the deathless gods."[1]

The possibility that God may be a trickster is another thing that throws a monkey wrench into Pascal's wager; there might be a god who likes liars and thieves, and rewards vice or mockery rather than piety or virtue. History shows that such gods were in fact worshiped by attested religions.

Trickster and the devil

From the portrayal of Loki in Marvel movies, to early Christianity, there has often been an emphasis on the "evil" aspects of the trickster figure in Western thinking. While the trickster figure is usually much more ambiguous and sometimes even venerated in the culture of origin, the trickster is portrayed in a negative light by most Christian sources that came into contact with the culture where the trickster figure originated. This goes as far as giving attributes of the trickster to the devil (who is not described in much detail in the Bible). As many cultures are only attested in writing through Christian sources (either because they had no own writing system[2] or because Christians eliminated most written sources[3]) it is often difficult to judge whether a trickster-like figure was viewed positively or negatively within its culture of origin.

Further reading

  • Henry Louis Gates, The Signifying Monkey (Oxford, 1988)
  • Lewis Hyde, Trickster Makes the World (Farrar, Strouss, and Giroux, 1998)
gollark: Because because... because?
gollark: And why not?
gollark: Also, what about the self-hosting thing, <@!111569489971159040>?
gollark: ***All hail parser combinators***
gollark: In pseudohaskell:```value = array <|> thingarray = between (char '[') (char ']') (sepBy value (char ','))thing = whatever sort of data is there```

References

  1. ...πολύτροπον, αἱμυλομήτην, ληιστῆρ᾽, ἐλατῆρα βοῶν, ἡγήτορ᾽ ὀνείρων, νυκτὸς ὀπωπητῆρα, πυληδόκον, ὃς τάχ᾽ ἔμελλεν, ἀμφανέειν κλυτὰ ἔργα μετ᾽ ἀθανάτοισι θεοῖσιν. Homeric Hymn to Hermes, Perseus.
  2. Like Nordic Paganism for most of its history
  3. Like Mayan and Aztec culture
This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.