Annie Christmas

{{Short description|Louisiana folklore character}}

Annie Christmas or flatboat AnnieJanet P. Johnson (author) and Charles Reasoner (illustrator) (1998). Keelboat Annie: an African-American Legend. Mahwah, NJ: Troll. {{ISBN|978-0816743476}}. {{OCLC|38472422}} is a character in the folklore and tall tales of Louisiana, described as a {{convert|7|ft|m}} tall, supernaturally strong African-American woman keelboat captain. She has been described as a female counterpart of the John Henry character, another supernaturally strong African American folklore character. Like John Henry, the character may have been based on a real person. Stories of Annie Christmas have been included in several collections of folktales from the Southern United States.Benjamin Albert Botkin. 1976. A treasury of Southern folklore: stories, ballads, traditions, and folkways of the people of the South. Edited with an Introd. by B. A. Botkin. With a foreword by Douglas Southall Freeman. Crown.A treasury of North American folktales. Book-of-the-Month Club, 1998Virginia Hamilton. 1995. Her Stories: African American Folktales, Fairy Tales, and True Tales. Scholastic Inc., 1995Bradford, M. R. "The Story of Annie Christmas". A Treasury of Mississippi River Folklore, 35–36.Creany, A. D. (2007). Heroines in North American folklore. ETEN 17, 117.

In his book "The Gangs of New Orleans", Herbert Asbury states that Annie Christmas was originally a white New Orleans woman and white folk hero, who “became a demigod among the Negroes” who presented her as black. He writes that “In the white version of the Annie Christmas saga, she was murdered in a New Orleans gambling-house, but Negro tradition permits no such commonplace end. The Negroes have it that she killed herself for love.”Herbert Asbury. 2004. The Gangs of New Orleans. Random House. London. pp. 82–83.

The stories describe how she defies traditional gender hierarchies and the rules and expectations for female behavior. She drinks exorbitant amounts of liquor and dominates men who challenge her authority. She wears a pearl necklace, and each pearl represents the defeat of someone who has unsuccessfully challenged her. Though unmarried, she has twelve sons who work as her crewmen on the keelboat.LaMonda Horton-Stallings. 2007. Mutha' is half a word: intersections of folklore, vernacular, myth, and queerness in black female culture. Ohio State University Press{{cite web|url=http://talltalehero.weebly.com/annie-christmas.html|publisher=talltalehero.weebly.com|title=Annie Christmas – Tall Tale Heroes|access-date=2017-04-13}}J. Suter, Globe Fearon. 1992. World Myths and Legends: Regional American. Pearson Prentice Hall, p. 31 In one tale of her death she was attacked by 100 men who shot and stabbed her.Jay Robert Nash. 1990. Encyclopedia of World Crime: A–C. Chromebooks, 1990Stephanie Athey. 2003. Sharpened Edge: Women of Color, Resistance, and Writing. Praeger, 2003

The novel 1993: Free Enterprise: A Novel of Mary Ellen Pleasant by Jamaican Author Michelle Cliff includes a character named Annie Christmas, probably inspired by the folktale character.Willis, Charlotte. 2007. Rene. Myth and Memory: Reconstructing the feminine in Caribbean-American fiction. Texas Christian University, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2007. 1441422.

Andrew Lloyd Webber and Jim Steinman wrote an Annie Christmas song for their play Whistle Down the Wind (1996).

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Further reading

  • Emile Carter Cook and Barbara Smetz (1974). Annie Christmas: Lady Longshoreman. Society for Visual Education (juvenile picture book with music and narration). {{OCLC|5609896}}
  • William Conrad (narrator) and Davie Krebs (producer) (1956). Annie Christmas. Pacifica Radio Archive {{OCLC|947288282}}
  • Available via YouTube as [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcpAzswLLQs "The Legend of Annie Christmas"] – replay of the CBS Radio Workshop episode (30 minutes)

{{American tall tales}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Christmas, Annie}}

Category: Louisiana folklore

Category: Fictional African-American people

Category: Fictional characters from New Orleans

Category:Fictional ship captains

Category: Legendary American people

Category: Tall tales

Category: Folklore of the Southern United States

Category:Heroes in mythology and legend