Dictionary Definition
trickster
Noun
1 someone who plays practical jokes on others
[syn: prankster,
cut-up,
tricker, hoaxer, practical
joker]
2 someone who leads you to believe something that
is not true [syn: deceiver, cheat, cheater, beguiler, slicker]
3 a mischevous supernatural being found in the
folklore of many primitive people; sometimes distinguished by
prodigious biological drives and exaggerated bodily parts
User Contributed Dictionary
- A mythological figure responsible for teaching others through the use of guile and treason.
- One who performs a trick.
- An impish or playful person.
Related terms
Translations
Extensive Definition
In mythology, and in the study of
folklore and religion, a trickster is a
god, goddess, spirit,
man, woman, or anthropomorphic animal
who plays tricks or otherwise disobeys normal rules and norms of
behavior.
While the trickster crosses various cultural
traditions, there are significant differences between tricksters in
the traditions of many Indigenous
peoples and those in the Euro-American tradition:
"Many native traditions held clowns and tricksters as essential
to any contact with the sacred. People could not pray
until they had laughed, because laughter opens and frees from
rigid preconception. Humans had to have tricksters within the most
sacred ceremonies for
fear that they forget the sacred comes through upset, reversal,
surprise. The trickster in most native traditions is essential to
creation, to birth".
Native tricksters should not be confused with the
Euro-American fictional picaro. One of the most important
distinctions is that "we can see in the Native American trickster
an openness to life's multiplicity and paradoxes largely missing in
the modern Euro-American moral tradition".
Mythology
The trickster deity breaks the rules of the gods or nature, sometimes maliciously (for example, Loki) but usually, albeit unintentionally, with ultimately positive effects. Often, the rule-breaking takes the form of tricks (eg. Eris) or thievery. Tricksters can be cunning or foolish or both; they are often funny even when considered sacred or performing important cultural tasks. An example of this is the sacred Heyoka, whose role is to play tricks and games and by doing so raises awareness and acts as an equalizer.In many cultures, (as may be seen in Greek,
Norse, or
Slavic
folktales, along with
Native American/First
Nations lore), the trickster and the culture hero
are often combined. To illustrate: Prometheus, in
Greek
mythology, stole fire
from the gods to give to humans. He is more of a culture hero than
a trickster. In many Native American and First Nations mythologies,
the coyote
(Southwestern
United States) or raven
(Pacific
Northwest, coastal British
Columbia, Alaska and Russian Far East)
stole fire from the gods (stars, moon, and/or sun) and are more tricksters than
culture heroes. This is primarily because of other stories
involving these spirits: Prometheus was a Titan,
whereas the Coyote
spirit and Raven
spirit are usually seen as jokesters and pranksters.
Frequently the Trickster figure exhibits gender
and form
variability, changing gender roles and engaging in same-sex practices. Such
figures appear in Native American and First Nations mythologies,
where they are said to have a two-spirit
nature. Loki, the Norse trickster, also exhibits gender
variability, in one case even becoming pregnant; interestingly, he
shares the ability to change genders with Odin, the chief Norse
deity who also possesses many characteristics of the Trickster. In
the case of Loki's pregnancy, he
was forced by the Gods to stop a giant from erecting a wall for
them before 7 days passed; he solved the problem by transforming
into a mare and drawing the giant's magical horse away from its
work. He returned some time later with a child he had given birth
to--the eight-legged horse Sleipnir, who
served as Odin's steed.
In some cultures, there are dualistic myths,
featuring two demiurges
creating the world, or two culture
heroes arranging the world — in a complementary manner.
Dualistic
cosmologies are present in all inhabited continents and show
great diversity: they may feature culture heroes, but also
demiurges (exemplifying a dualistic creation
myth in the latter case), or other beings; the two heroes may
compete or collaborate; they may be conceived as neutral or
contrasted as good versus evil; be of the same importance or
distinguished as powerful versus weak; be brothers (even twins) or
be not relatives at all.
Coyote
The Coyote mythos is one of the most popular among Native American cultures. Coyote is a ubiquitous being and can be categorized in many types. In creation myths, Coyote appears as the Creator himself; but he may at the same time be the messenger, the culture hero, the trickster, the fool. He has also the ability of the transformer: in some stories he is a handsome young man; in others he is an animal; yet others present him as just a power, a sacred one. According to Crow (and other Plains) tradition, Old Man Coyote impersonates the Creator, "Old Man Coyote took up a handful of mud and out of it made people". His creative power is also spread onto words, "Old Man Coyote named buffalo, deer, elk, antelopes, and bear. And all these came into being". In such myths Coyote-Creator is never mentioned as an animal; more, he can meet his animal counterpart, the coyote: they address each other as "elder brother" and "younger brother", and walk and talk together. According to A. Hultkranz, the impersonation of Coyote as Creator is a result of a taboo, a mythic substitute to the religious notion of the Great Spirit whose name was too dangerous and/or sacred to use apart from a special ceremony.In Chelan myths, Coyote belongs to the animal
people but he is at the same time "a power just like the Creator,
the head of all the creatures". Yet his being 'just like the
Creator' does not really mean being 'the Creator': it is not seldom
that Coyote-Just-Like-Creator is subject to the Creator, Great
Chief Above, who can punish him, send him away, take powers away
from him, etc. In the Pacific Northwest tradition, Coyote is mostly
mentioned as a messenger, or minor power, "Coyote was sent to the
camp of the chief of the Cold Wind tribe to deliver a challenge;
Coyote traveled around to tell all the people in both tribes about
the contest." As such, Coyote "was cruelly treated, and his work
was never done."
As the culture hero, Coyote appears in various
mythic traditions. His major heroic attributes are transformation,
traveling, high deeds, power. He is engaged in changing the ways of
rivers, standing of mountains, creating new landscapes and getting
sacred things for people. Of mention is the tradition of Coyote
fighting against monsters. According to Wasco tradition, Coyote was
the hero to fight and kill Thunderbird, the killer of people, but
he could do that not because of his personal power, but due to the
help of the Spirit Chief; Coyote was trying his best, he was
fighting hard, and he had to have fasted ten days before the fight,
so advised by Spirit Chief 8. In many Wasco myths, Coyote rivals
the Raven (Crow) about the same ordeal: in some stories, Multnomah
Falls came to be by Coyote's efforts; in others, it is done by
Raven.
More often than not Coyote is a trickster, but he
is always different. In some stories, he is a noble trickster,
"Coyote takes water from the Frog people... because it is not right
that one people have all the water." In others, he is mean, "Coyote
determined to bring harm to Duck. He took Duck's wife and children,
whom he treated badly."
Archetype
see List of modern day trickstersThe Trickster is an example of a Jungian
archetype. In modern literature the trickster survives as a
character archetype, not necessarily supernatural or divine,
sometimes no more than a stock
character.
In later folklore, the trickster is incarnated as
a clever, mischievous man or creature, who tries to survive the
dangers and challenges of the world using trickery and deceit as a
defense. For example many typical fairy tales
have the King who wants to find the best groom for his daughter by
ordering several trials. No brave and valiant prince or knight
manages to win them, until a poor and simple peasant comes. With
the help of his wits and cleverness, instead of fighting, he evades
or fools monsters and villains and dangers with unorthodox manners.
Therefore the most unlikely candidate passes the trials and
receives the reward. More modern and obvious examples of that type
are Bugs
Bunny and The Tramp
(Charlie
Chaplin) (see
list).
The trickster is an enduring archetype that
crosses many cultures
and appears in a wide variety of popular media. For a
modern humanist study of the trickster archetypes and their effects
on society and its evolution, see Trickster Makes This World:
Mischief, Myth, and Art by Lewis
Hyde.
The trickster's literary role in dismantling oppressive systems
Modern African American literary criticism has
turned the trickster figure into one example of how it is possible
to overcome a system of oppression from within. For years,
African American literature was discounted by the greater
community of American literary criticism while its authors were
still obligated to use the language and the rhetoric of the very
system that relegated African Americans and other minorities to the
ostracized position of the cultural “other.” The central question
became one of how to overcome this system when the only words
available were created and defined by the oppressors. As Audre Lorde
explained, the problem was that “the master’s tools [would] never
dismantle the master’s house.”
In his writings of the late 1980s, Henry
Louis Gates, Jr. presents the concept of Signifyin(g).
Wound up in this theory is the idea that the “master’s house” can
be “dismantled” using his “tools” if the tools are used in a new or
unconventional way. To demonstrate this process, Gates cites the
interactions found in African American narrative poetry between the
trickster, the
“Signifying Monkey”, and his oppressor, the Lion. According to
Gates, the “Signifying Monkey” is the “New World figuration” and
“functional equivalent” of the Esu trickster figure of African
Yoruba mythology. The Lion functions as the authoritative figure in
his classical role of “King of the Jungle.” He is the one who
commands the Signifying Monkey’s movements. Yet the Monkey is able
to outwit the Lion continually in these narratives through his
usage of figurative language. According to Gates, “[T]he Signifying
Monkey is able to signify upon the Lion because the Lion does not
understand the Monkey’s discourse…The monkey speaks figuratively,
in a symbolic code; the lion interprets or reads literally and
suffers the consequences of his folly…” In this way, the Monkey
uses the same language as the Lion, but he uses it on a level that
the Lion cannot comprehend. This usually leads to the Lion’s
“trounc[ing]” at the hands of a third-party, the Elephant. The net
effect of all of this is “the reversal of [the Lion’s] status as
the King of the Jungle.” In this way, the “master’s house” is
dismantled when his own tools are turned against him by the
trickster Monkey.
Following in this tradition, critics since Gates
have come to assert that another popular African American folk
trickster, Brer Rabbit,
uses clever language to perform the same kind of rebellious
societal deconstruction as the Signifying Monkey. Brer Rabbit is
the “creative way that the slave community responded to the
oppressor’s failure to address them as human beings created in the
image of God.” The figurative representative of this slave
community, Brer Rabbit is the hero with a “fragile body but a
deceptively strong mind” that allows him to “create [his] own
symbols in defiance of the perverted logic of the oppressor.” By
twisting language to create these symbols, Brer Rabbit not only was
the “personification of the ethic of self-preservation” for the
slave community, but also “an alternative response to their
oppressor’s false doctrine of anthropology.” Through his language
of trickery, Brer Rabbit outwits his oppressors, deconstructing, in
small ways, the hierarchy of subjugation to which his weak body
forces him to physically conform.
Before Gates, there was some precedent for the
analysis of African American folk heroes as destructive agents of
an oppressive hierarchical system. In the 1920s and 1930s, T. S. Eliot
and Ezra
Pound engaged in an epistolary correspondence. Both writers
signed the letters with pseudonyms adopted from the Uncle Remus
tales; Eliot was “Possum;” Pound was
“Tar
Baby.” Pound and Eliot wrote in the same “African slave”
dialect of the tales. Pound, writing later of the series of
letters, distinguished the language from “the Queen’s English, the
language of public propriety.” This rebellion against proper
language came as part of “collaboration” between Pound and Eliot
“against the London literary establishment and the language that it
used.” Although Pound and Eliot were not attempting to overthrow an
establishment as expansive as the one oppressing the African
American slave community, they were actively trying to establish
for themselves a new kind of literary freedom. In their usage of
the Uncle
Remus trickster figures’ names and dialects, they display an
early understanding of the way in which cleverly manipulated
language can dismantle a restrictive hierarchy.
African American literary criticism and folktales
are not the only place in the American literary tradition that
tricksters are to be found combating subjugation from within an
oppressive system. In When Brer Rabbit Meets Coyote, the argument
is posited that the Brer Rabbit stories were derived from a mixture
of African and Native
American mythology, thus attributing part of the credit for the
formation of the tales and wiles of Brer Rabbit to “Indian
captivity narratives” and the rabbit trickster found in Cherokee
mythology. In arguing for a merged “African-Native American
folklore,” the idea is forwarded that certain shared “cultural
affinities” between African Americans and Native Americans allowed
both groups “through the trickster tales…survive[d] European
American cultural and political domination.”
Tricksters in various cultures
- Abenaki mythology ... Azeban
- Akan mythology ... Kwaku Ananse
- American folklore__ ... Sterling Atkins(also known as the O.S. or Original Snitch)] and Brer Rabbit (or Compere Lapin) and Aunt Nancy, a corruption of Anansi (Anansee)
- Arabian mythology ... Juha
- Ashanti mythology ... Anansi
- Australian Aboriginal mythology ... Bamapana
- Aztec mythology ... Huehuecoyotl
- Bantu mythology ... the Hare (Tsuro or Kalulu)
- Basque mythology ... San Martin Txiki
- Brazilian folklore ... Saci-Pererê
- Celtic mythology ... Fairy, Puck, Briccriu, Gwydion
- Chinese mythology ... Nezha, Sun Wukong (the Monkey King)
- Cree mythology . . . Wisakedjak
- Crow mythology ... Awakkule, Mannegishi
- Dutch folklore ... Reynaert de Vos, Tijl Uilenspiegel
- Egyptian mythology ... Seth
- Estonian mythology ... Kaval-Ants (The Wily Ants)
- French folklore ... Renart the Fox
- Fijian mythology ... Daucina
- German folklore ... Till Eulenspiegel, Reineke Fuchs
- Greek mythology ... Eris, Prometheus, Hephaestos, Hermes, Odysseus, Sisyphus
- Haida mythology ... Nankil'slas (Raven spirit), (Coyote)
- Hawaiian mythology ... Iwa, Kaulu, Kupua, Maui, Pekoi.
- Hindu mythology ... Baby Krishna stealing ghee
- Hopi and Zuni mythology ... Kokopelli
- Indonesian folklore ... Kantjil, or kancil in modern grammar
- Inuit mythology ... Amaguq
- Japanese mythology ... Kitsune, Susanoo, Kappa
- Jewish mythology ... Asmodeus, Jacob, Lilith
- Jewish folklore ... Hershele Ostropoler
- Lakota mythology ... Iktomi, Heyoka
- Levantine mythology ... Yaw
- Islamic mythology ... Nasreddin
- Miwok mythology ... Coyote
- Navajo mythology ... Tonenili
- Nootka mythology ... Chulyen, Guguyni
- Norse mythology ... Loki
- Northwest Caucasian mythology ... Sosruko
- Ohlone mythology ... Coyote
- Ojibwe mythology ... Nanabozho
- Philippine mythology ... Juan Tamad, Nuno sa Punso, Aswang
- Polynesian mythology ... Maui
- Pomo mythology ... Coyote
- Pueblos dancing ... Sacred Clowns - Koshares Paiyakyamu
- Slavic mythology ... Veles
- Tibetan folklore ... Uncle Tompa
- Tumbuka mythology...Kalulu
- Tsimshian mythology ... Txaamsm, Raven, 'Wiigyet (Big Man)
- Ute mythology ... Cin-an-ev
- Vodou ... Papa Legba, Ti Malice, Baron Samedi
- West African mythology ... Anansi
- Yoruba mythology ... Eshu
See also
Notes
References
- Franchot Ballinger, Gerald Vizenor Sacred Reversals: Trickster in Gerald Vizenor's "Earthdivers: Tribal Narratives on Mixed Descent" American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 9, No. 1, The Literary Achievements of Gerald Vizenor (Winter, 1985), pp. 55-59 doi:10.2307/1184653
- Franchot Ballinger Ambigere: The Euro-American Picaro and the Native American Trickster MELUS, Vol. 17, No. 1, Native American Fiction: Myth and Criticism (Spring, 1991 - Spring, 1992), pp. 21-38 doi:10.2307/467321
- L. Bryce Boyer, Ruth M. Boyer The Sacred Clown of the Chiricahua and Mescalero Apaches: Additional Data Western Folklore, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Jan., 1983), pp. 46-54 doi:10.2307/1499465
- California on the Eve - California Indians Miwok creation story
- Joseph Durwin Coulrophobia & The Trickster
- George P. Hansen The trickster and the Paranormal (2001)
- Lori Landay Madcaps, Screwballs, and Con Women: The Female Trickster in American Culture 1998 University of Pennsylvania Press
- Paul Radin The trickster: a study in American Indian mythology (1956)
- Allan J. Ryan The Trickster Shift: Humour and irony in contemporary native art 1999 Univ of Washington ISBN 0774807040
- Trickster’s Way Volume 3, Issue 1 2004 Article 3 TRICKSTER AND THE TREKS OF HISTORY
- A Tejút fiai. Tanulmányok a finnugor népek hitvilágáról Chapter means: “Social structure and dualistic creation myths in Siberia”; title means: “The sons of Milky Way. Studies on the belief systems of Finno-Ugric peoples”.
External links
trickster in Danish: Trickster
trickster in German: Trickster
trickster in Estonian: Trikster
trickster in Spanish: Trickster
trickster in French: Trickster
trickster in Western Frisian: Skarlún
trickster in Japanese: トリックスター
trickster in Polish: Trickster
trickster in Russian: Трикстер
trickster in Simple English: Trickery
trickster in Swedish: Trickster
trickster in Slovak: Trickster
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Artful Dodger, Philadelphia lawyer, Yankee horse
trader, charmer,
cheat, cheater, con man, conjurer, crafty rascal,
defrauder, diddler, dodger, double-dealer, escamoteur, flimflammer, fox, glib tongue, gyp artist, horse
trader, illusionist,
juggler, magician, prestidigitator,
reynard, sharper, shyster, sleight-of-hand
performer, slick citizen, sly dog, slyboots, sweet talker,
swindler, tricker