The unacknowledged debt Potter owed to the Brer Rabbit stories told by enslaved Africans deserves to be recognised, says scholar

Think of Beatrix Potter and you will probably call to mind her tales of Peter Rabbit, Jemima Puddle-Duck and Mrs Tiggy-Winkle. These popular stories, with their English country garden settings and precise illustrations, have been stalwarts of British children’s bookshelves over the past century. Yet the stories may not be as British as most of us assume.

Dr Emily Zobel Marshall, in a new essay for The Conversation, has called for wider acknowledgment of the debt Potter owed to the Brer Rabbit stories told by enslaved Africans working on American plantations.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Not the future we should be going for’: the reopening of Wales’s Aberpergwm coalmine

Jacob Rees-Mogg’s call to once more dig for coal at the colliery…

Two 16-year-old boys fatally stabbed about mile apart in south-east London

Met police investigating whether two killings, believed to have happened at about…

BBC won’t have wall-to-wall coverage of Prince Philip funeral after record complaints

Impact on billed broadcast schedules upon the duke’s death made ‘some viewers…

We’re not all heathens in Manchester, Andy Burnham tells ENO

Mayor of Greater Manchester steps into row over opera company’s mooted move…