From Kirkus Reviews
A model of rangy, creative, but not far-fetched interpretation, in this case of a common mythological archetype, the shifty trickster. With often inspired readings of a variety of myths, including the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, North American tales of Raven and Coyote, myths of the Yoruba god Eshu and the Norse god Loki, Hyde (Art and Politics/Kenyon Coll.; The Gift, 1983) delineates some of their common themes: voracious appetite, ingenious theft, deceit, opportunism, and shamelessness. Through such themes trickster tales dramatize a mythic consciousness of accident and contingency (supplementing fate), moral ambiguity, foolishness, and transgression--in other words, the world as it is, rather than the way it may originally have been intended by the more senior gods. While careful to note that tricksters are heroes in a symbolic, imagined world and fixtures of wider polytheistic moral orders, Hyde ultimately identifies the trickster's crucial role as boundary-crosser with the provoking one often taken up by the artist in modern times. Without ever being heavy-handed about universal archetypes, Hyde uses such examples as Marcel Duchamp, Allen Ginsberg, and Maxine Hong Kingston, vividly illustrating the ``trickster consciousness'' as a vital component of human imagination. His choice of the fiery 19th-century African-American orator Frederick Douglass may at first seem puzzling in this regard. But in light of the real-life gravity of the ``boudaries'' Douglass crossed, and the ingenuity with which he did so, Hyde's example makes sense. Indeed, with his clever interpretive skills and his eye for the meaning-rich detail, Hyde brightly illuminates the ways in which his examples struggled to subvert such seemingly intractable elements as the defintion of art or slavery and segregation. Eclectic and cunning in its own connections, Hyde's wandering journey through cultures shows him to be nearly as versatile and ingenious as that master trickster, Odysseus. (illustrations, not seen) --
Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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Review
"A major work of scholarship that is also a major work of art." --
Sacvan Bercovitch, Harvard University"A rich study exploring the paradox that culture is articulated by subversive innovation, Professor Hyde's Trickster Makes This World is a humanist essay written at a time when uniformity calls itself diversity; repression, freedom; and bigotry, patriotism. It can be read as a sustained commentary on the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, or as an inquiry into the sociology of rigidity and flexibility." --
Guy Davenport"Brillant... By the time he is done he has folded language, culture, and the very habit of being human into his ken." --
The New Yorker"Persuasively celebrates the need for the kind of paintings, music, books and ideas that society initially finds unpleasant... [A] hymn to the gods of mischief, who are also the gods of artistic and cultural renewal." --
Michael Dirda, The Washington Post"Persuasively celebrates the need for the kind of paintings, music, books and ideas that society initially finds unpleasant...[A] hymn to the gods of mischief, who are also the gods of artistic and cultural renewal."--Michael Dirda,
The Washington Post"Hyde is one of our true superstars of nonfiction."--
David Foster Wallace"Brilliant...By the time he is done he has folded language, culture, and the very habit of being human into his ken."--
The New Yorker"A major work of scholarship that is also a major work of art."--Sacvan Bercovitch, Harvard University
"[
Trickster] should be ready by anyone interested in the grand and squalid matter of all things human..."--Margaret Atwood,
Los Angeles Times --
ReviewBrilliant . . . [Hyde] has folded language, culture, and the very habit of being human into his ken. --
The New YorkerLewis Hyde's second masterpiece . . . He's one of those quirky, eccentric Wise Children the United States sometimes throws up--a sort of Thoreau-cum-anthropologist-cum-seer . . . This book should be read by anyone interested in the grand and squalid matter of all things human. --
Margaret Atwood, Los Angeles Times Book Review
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