The Conjure Woman, and Other Conjure Tales

The Conjure Woman, and Other Conjure Tales

1993 • 220 pages

Ratings1

Average rating5

15

The stories in The Conjure Woman were Charles W. Chesnutt's first great literary success, and since their initial publication in 1899 they have come to be seen as some of the most remarkable works of African American literature from the Emancipation through the Harlem Renaissance. Lesser known, though, is that the The Conjure Woman, as first published by Houghton Mifflin, was not wholly Chesnutt's creation but a work shaped and selected by his editors. This edition reassembles for the first time all of Chesnutt's work in the conjure tale genre, the entire imaginative feat of which the published Conjure Woman forms a part. It allows the reader to see how the original volume was created, how an African American author negotiated with the tastes of the dominant literary culture of the late nineteenth century, and how that culture both promoted and delimited his work. In the tradition of Uncle Remus, the conjure tale listens in on a poor black southerner, speaking strong dialect, as he recounts a local incident to a transplanted northerner for the northerner's enlightenment and edification. But in Chesnutt's hands the tradition is transformed. No longer a reactionary flight of nostalgia for the antebellum South, the stories in this book celebrate and at the same time question the folk culture they so pungently portray, and ultimately convey the pleasures and anxieties of a world in transition. Written in the late nineteenth century, a time of enormous growth and change for a country only recently reunited in peace, these stories act as the uneasy meeting ground for the culture of northern capitalism, professionalism, and Christianity and the underdeveloped southern economy, a kind of colonial Third World whose power is manifest in life charms, magic spells, and ha'nts, all embodied by the ruling figure of the conjure woman. Humorous, heart-breaking, lyrical, and wise, these stories make clear why the fiction of Charles W. Chesnutt has continued to captivate audiences for a century.


Become a Librarian

Reviews

Popular Reviews

Reviews with the most likes.

Difficult to read because of the heavy dialect, but the stories are entertaining. It's interesting to see the frame stories where Chesnutt presents himself as a white northern interpreter of these tales.

March 31, 2019

Top Lists

See all (0)

List

195 books

Kudzu Kingdom

All Over But the Shoutin'
The American Plague
Black Magic
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
Mountain Magick: Folk Wisdom from the Heart of Appalachia
Southern Lady Code: Essays
Tell My Horse

List

182 books

Witchery

Crone's Book of Magical Words
The Crone's Book of Wisdom
Mythos: The Greek Myths Retold
The Spiral of Memory and Belonging: A Celtic Path of Soul and Kinship
The Mabinogion
Norse Mythology
Anathema!: Medieval Scribes and the History of Book Curses

List

140 books

Shorts

The Old Order
Pale Horse, Pale Rider
A Slip of the Keyboard: Collected Non-Fiction
The Call of Cthulhu and Other Weird Stories
The Hound of the Baskervilles
The Complete Stories
The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty