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32 results for "Folk tales--North Carolina"
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Record #:
36967
Author(s):
Abstract:
Folktales often come from events done by local characters; fools or jesters in their respective communities often represented the archetypal stories that are still talked about today. The subjects of these stories played an active role in the social landscape and were celebrated for acting a fool.
Record #:
35883
Author(s):
Abstract:
The geographical characteristics of surroundings can often seem to impress themselves on the individual. People that lived in the mountains tended to be independent, stubborn, and had their own code of honor.
Record #:
35831
Author(s):
Abstract:
Beginning with a brief biography of Ray Hicks and how he began telling Jack tales, the author recorded three tales, “The Doctor’s Daughter/Jack and the Robbers,” “The Cat and the Mouse,” and “Lucky and Unlucky Jack.”
Record #:
35786
Author(s):
Abstract:
An introduction for four stories about Jack Tales, which are a subgenre of folklore that always center on the character “Jack,” the hero.
Record #:
16363
Author(s):
Abstract:
The New Hope community is located on the Iredell County side of the Wilkes-Iredell County border. Despite its proximity to more urban ways of life, New Hope maintains much of its traditional rural heritage. Witch stories are quite common in this area; Stone gives several examples.
Record #:
35737
Author(s):
Abstract:
A collection of stories about ghosts, stilling, fishing, death omens, and animals. Written by various authors.
Record #:
35704
Author(s):
Abstract:
North of Elizabeth City lies a stretch of land that does not allow anything to grow. Said to be haunted, a couple of teenagers in the late 1960s drove out there and were chased in their car by a monster that came out of the nearby river.
Record #:
35709
Abstract:
After hearing about Mr. Miller’s stories, the author spent the morning with him, collecting stories and folktales that Mr. Miller had experienced or heard since his childhood.
Record #:
35714
Author(s):
Abstract:
The folktale motif of an animal imitating its master and resulting in an accidental suicide is shown through three stories. In the three, an orangutan kills itself by imitating the master shaving, although the third story has a version where the animal tries to shave someone else, and kills them instead.
Record #:
35654
Author(s):
Abstract:
The author first heard a ghost story about a ghost that led to the death of its former fiancé from his grandmother, and then collected variations of the same story from other sources.
Record #:
35656
Abstract:
A collection entitled the “Tar-Pitt Tales” relates various stories that are located along the banks of the Tar River. Five of the stories are copied here, “Noey Lee’s Treasure,” “Mrs. Williams’ Ride,” “George Banks,” “Old Nelson House,” and “Death Light.”
Record #:
35657
Author(s):
Abstract:
The author collected three stories from some people living in the mountains of North Carolina, “The Third Sister,” “Ray Hicks and Family,” and “Mr. Mack.”
Record #:
35667
Author(s):
Abstract:
A collection of short stories about ghosts, death, the devil, and animals.
Record #:
35668
Author(s):
Abstract:
According to his family, an ancestor of the author had a run-in with the infamous pirate Blackbeard. Apparently the two men showed off their skills with swordplay, and parted ways amicably.