Certain literary academic types like to search for the roots of stories. Get a bunch of them together and pretty soon you'll start hearing terms like "origin myth" and "archetype" being bandied about. (Well, that's what you hear when you serve them tea and coffee. Serve booze and you may get something entirely different) That's because these thinkers spend a lot of their lives trying to understand humanity and culture through its literature and art. Stories and characters are created to answer needs in the human psyche and some needs are so deeply rooted we don't completely understand how or why they exist. But because they exist, each generation makes up its own stories that revive or reinvent these characters and their adventures. The stories gain or lose shades of complexity that correspond to aspects of the era it was hatched in but certain characters (or archetypes) reappear from one generation to the next and in stories from very different cultures. Look anywhere in the pages World Literature and you'll find the Wise Old Mentor or the terrifying Shade.You'll also find my personal favorite there: the Trickster, the wiliest, most entertaining Hero in the pack.

Think about it, Bugs is the coolest member of the Warner Brothers cast. Fast-talking, fast thinking and nimble, he runs circles around Elmer Fudd and anyone else who stands in his way. He continually turns the plot upside down and fools his opponent at every turn, sometimes with rhythmic patter, (Rabbit Season/Duck Season) and sometimes by dressing in drag (Bugs as Brunhilde in What's Opera, Doc introduced most of us to Wagner and cross-dressing) With Bugs, the ending is always the same. Bugs wins by trickery and never dies. He exchanges nobility of soul for a brilliant brain and becomes the hero that's cool. Not bad for a "rascally rabbit".
Actually the list of trickster heroes includes more than one rabbit and several of them are animals. The Trickster Heroes in Native American literature appear as raccoons, coyotes, foxes and other animals. African tribes also created stories starring animal tricksters who overcame authority with their wits, the essential quality of the trickster. The trickster is always an outsider who subverts and overcomes authority by outwitting the ruling powers. Thank heavens some trickster heroes are human (or human shaped) as well.

The one thing we're still a bit short on are trickster heroines although there are a few. Scheherezade tricked the king into keeping her alive with her wealth of stories and Pippi Longstocking qualifies, even if I don't like her. Ramona the Pest might also make the list. Either way, we need more girls with the smarts to turn authority upside down and over on itself. That's what tricksters do. That's why we like them. They're the heroes that are "too cool for school".
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