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MrStaggerLee
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The line between fairytale and myth is often blurred. I have a book of Native American stories that I'd call fairytales, though the book calls them myths. African fairytales are also often described as myths.
I love trickster stories of all kinds. They illuminate human nature so wonderfully. They tell us that though we want to see great and powerful heroes, we also want to see those heroes humbled sometimes. Coyote, Raven, Loki, Anansi the Spider, the Kitsune in Japanese tales, all serve to show us we ain't 'all that', especially when we think we are.
I love trickster stories of all kinds. They illuminate human nature so wonderfully. They tell us that though we want to see great and powerful heroes, we also want to see those heroes humbled sometimes. Coyote, Raven, Loki, Anansi the Spider, the Kitsune in Japanese tales, all serve to show us we ain't 'all that', especially when we think we are.
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