The Tall Tales of Davy Crockett - 2nd Edition by Michael A Lofaro (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Published from 1835 to 1856, the Crockett almanacs were the primary force in the creation of a tall tale Davy Crockett as our country's first comic superman.
- About the Author: Michael A. Lofaro is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the author or editor of several books related to Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone, Blackhawk, and their associated American legends.
- 164 Pages
- Social Science, Folklore & Mythology
Description
About the Book
These never before collected or reprinted tales, were part of the original primary force that created the tall tale Davy Crockett.
The Nashville almanacs significantly contributed to the development of the Davy Crockett myths. Two-thirds of the tales found in this edition have never before been collected or reprinted in any readily accessible form.
Book Synopsis
Published from 1835 to 1856, the Crockett almanacs were the primary force in the creation of a tall tale Davy Crockett as our country's first comic superman. In these rare almanacs, the historical Crockett became a fictional backwoods screamer who could "run faster, --jump higher, --squat lower, --dive deeper, --stay under longer, --and come out drier, than any many in the whole country."
As the best known of the early ring-tailed roarers, Davy also became an integral building block in the humor of the Old Southwest. Ben Harding, Crockett's fictional sidekick, warned nineteenth-century readers that the "terrificashus" adventures of Davy, Mike Fink, the "riproarious she-males," and the fabulous woodcuts that illustrated them were so funny that "You had best to hoop your ribs before you reed 'em or you will shake your bowels out a Laffing."
Although the significance of the Nashville almanacs in initiating and developing Crockett's mythic world is an accepted tenet in the study of American humor, the second series of almanacs has never before been reproduced in facsimile, and two thirds of the tales have never before been collected or reprinted in any readily accessible form.
In his introduction, Michael A. Lofaro examines the history and evolution of these tall tales and stresses their importance both as transitional markers in the growth of the Crockett legend and as cultural mirrors of the attitudes of their publishers and readers.
About the Author
Michael A. Lofaro is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the author or editor of several books related to Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone, Blackhawk, and their associated American legends.