biography
| name: |
Harris, Joel Chandler
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1848–1908)
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| biography:
| Writer, born near Eatonville, Georgia, USA. As a boy he worked as a printer's assistant (1860–2) on a newspaper published by Joseph Addison Turner, who also encouraged him to read and write. Turner owned a plantation, and Harris became acquainted with the African-American slaves and their speech, stories, and customs. He then became a journalist for newspapers in Macon and Savannah, GA, and in New Orleans before settling in Atlanta to work for the Atlanta Constitution (1876–1900), which carried the first of his ‘Uncle Remus Stories’ ‘,The Story of Mr Rabbit and Mr Fox’ (1879). Its popularity led to a long series of tales, published over the next quarter century in various collections, starting with Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings (1880). The tales feature Uncle Remus, an African-American and former slave who tells the tales to the son of the family he now serves. Many of the stories feature animals such as Brer (Brother) Rabbit and Brer Fox, and draw on the folklore of African-Americans as well as reproduce their speech, so that the tales are regarded as providing at least glimpses of authentic folklore. Harris also wrote other stories and novels about life in the South. His On the Wing of Occasions (1900) is a collection of stories featuring Billy Sanders, the Sage of Shady Dale, a character who expresses the views of average Georgians of the day. |
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