

Uncle Remus stories
Book • 1881
This book is a compilation of animal stories, songs, and oral folklore collected from Southern black Americans.
The stories are framed in the context of a plantation and told by the kindly old freedman Uncle Remus.
Many of the tales are didactic, similar to Aesop's Fables, and belong to the trickster tale genre.
Harris wrote the stories in a dialect he devised to represent the Deep South Black dialect of the time, aiming to preserve the cultural heritage and oral traditions of African Americans.
The collection has been both praised for its capture of plantation Black dialect and criticized for its portrayal of plantation life and racist stereotypes.
The stories are framed in the context of a plantation and told by the kindly old freedman Uncle Remus.
Many of the tales are didactic, similar to Aesop's Fables, and belong to the trickster tale genre.
Harris wrote the stories in a dialect he devised to represent the Deep South Black dialect of the time, aiming to preserve the cultural heritage and oral traditions of African Americans.
The collection has been both praised for its capture of plantation Black dialect and criticized for its portrayal of plantation life and racist stereotypes.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 0 episodes
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as the author of the books that inspired the film Song of the South.

Eric Molinsky

Mary Blair: Coloring Outside the Lines at Disney
Mentioned by Jim Ockmuty and Baudelaire as the author who lived in the Wren's Nest, a museum and former home.

The Wren’s Nest (Classic)