Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Caribbean Folklore: Le Loupgarou and Ol Higue

Le Loupgarou and Ol Higue Folklore exists in whiley cultures throughout the world. Folklore in the form of tales, myths and legends is passed from generation to generation through the oral tradition. Folklore in the Caribbean has been pinched from the rich and diverse backgrounds of our ancestors who came from various parts of the world. Our ancestors brought with them their language, culture, religious beliefs and practices, and their tradition of storytelling.The tales of demons, ghosts, zombies and spirits have been fascinating for the young and old alike, and variations of these stories have been told again and again. Le Loupgarou and Ol Higue appropriate similar characteristics as they are both based on Caribbean folklore. Le Loupgarou means werewolf or lagahoo. Fittingly, Derek Walcotts poem tells a tale of a man named Le Brun. He sold his soul to the devil and so he changes into a werewolf at night. He is ostracized by the village and lives all only if in a small old house .Similarly, Ol Higue by Mark Mcwatt is a poem about what Caribbean people would call a soucouyant which is in essence, a young-bearing(prenominal) vampire that takes off her old skin at night and turns into a fire ball, lurking through the nights to feed on her poor victims. Interestingly enough, the soucouyant is the female replica for the lagahoo. The old woman is Ol Higue, like Le Brun, lives alone in an old house. She almost never comes outside during the day as her feeding is done at night.She doesnt like children and isnt amiable by nature which are also characteristic of Le Brun. Walcotts poem opens with the line A curious tale suggesting that we, already from the beginning, should be questioning the verity of the story since tale usually is associated with fiction. Ol Higue doesnt indicate that it is a fictitious story but as Caribbean people, it is easy to come to the windup just from the first stanza that she is a soucouyant. Le loupgarou is written in a continues Read full essay

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.