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Brer-rabbit-in-briar-patch copy 1864

Please don't throw me in the briar patch!

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"Te capiam, cunicule sceleste!"
—Episode 9 title of the Negima anime.
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The Rascally Rabbit is a rabbit or hare that is mischievous, troublesome or tricksome. Rabbits and hares have long been depicted as tricksters in worldwide mythology, and this has carried over to modern fiction.

To a certain degree this can be Truth in Television, at least from the point of view of any farmers or gardners trying to keep rabbits and hares from doing damage to their crops.

For more information, see this article on the traditional symbolism of rabbits.

Compare to rabbits that are flat out evil and violent, which would be the Hair-Raising Hare, and rabbits that are used for the sake of cuteness. See also Lucky Rabbit's Foot


Examples



Anime and Manga[]

  • In D.N.Angel, With is a living art creature that strongly ressembles a rabbit (the Anime explicity calls him a rabbit). He acts as a Familiar to a Phantom Thief and his shapeshifting powers are used to trick people. In the anime, he also sometimes engages in minor acts of michief such as tagging along with Daisuke at school by hiding in Daisuke's school bag or eating all the strawberries.


Advertising[]

  • The Trix Rabbit is constantly trying schemes to trick his way into getting the Trix cereal, though unlike the classical trickster, he usually fails.
  • The Nestle Quik (now known as Nesquik) bunny is a trickster as well, but more benevolent. He leads the kids around the neighborhood doing chores for grownups so the grownups will reward them with Quik. There have been other ads where he is chased for his chocolate milk.


Fan Works[]

  • In the New Zork chapter of With Strings Attached, the harveys that kidnap John invoke Bugs Bunny as trickster: “... gonna be terrorists like Saint Bugs!”


Film[]

  • The 1946 Disney film Song of the South is a frame story based on three Br'er Rabbit stories, "The Laughing Place", "The Tar Baby", and "The Briar Patch".
  • In 1975, Brer Rabbit stories were retold for an adult audience in the cult film Coonskin,
  • A direct-to-video film The Adventures of Brer Rabbit, was released in 2006.
  • Harvey has Harvye the pooka, a large anthropomorphic rabbit who can be seen only by the protagonist, from the play and film bearing his name.


Literature[]

  • Peter Rabbit was a notorious troublemaker, as was his cousin Benjamin.
  • Watership Down has El-ahrairah, the rabbits' own mythological/folkloric trickster figure. During their journey the rabbits tell several tales of El-ahrairah's trickster abilities.
  • Max of the children's series Max and Ruby is an innocent example. He's a scheming tot who regularly gets into mischief, much to his sister's dismay.
  • Bunnicula, a vampire bunny, although harmless, can do things like inexplicably escape his cage in the night and drain the juices out of vegetables.
  • In Anansi Boys, it is mentioned that some trickster rabbit stories were initially Anansi's.
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 The story of the Tar-Baby, the one they tell about Bre'r Rabbit? That was Anansi's story first. Some people thinks he was a rabbit. But that's their mistake. He wasn't a rabbit. He was a spider.

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  • Zomo The Rabbit: A Trickster Tale from West Africa by Gerald McDermott is Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
  • Who Is Boo?: The Terrific Tales of One Trickster Rabbit is a book for children that chronicles a perpetually curious rabbit who is in a continual race around the world with his and along the way, meets many animals. The title character is inspired by Nanabozho, a trickster figure in Ojibwe mythology, but the story itself is inspired from the trickster characters prevalent in many cultures.
  • How Rabbit Tricked Otter: And Other Cherokee Trickster Stories - This collection of 15 Cherokee tales introduces the trickster-hero Rabbit, the most important character portrayed in the animal stories of the Cherokee culture. The surefooted messenger who carries important news to his animal friends near and far, Rabbit is charming and mischievous—he tricks others and is often tricked himself. Sometimes he wins and sometimes he loses; sometimes he is lazy and mean, sometimes kind and caring—but somehow Rabbit always survives.
  • Lapin Plays Possum: Trickster Tales From the Louisiana Bayou - Lapin is a classic trickster rabbit, and is considered by some to be the Cajun equivalent of Brer Rabbit.
  • Tio Conejo (Uncle Rabbit) And Other Latin American Trickster Tales is an audiobook that includes rabbit trickster tales.
  • The Tale of Rabbit and Coyote is a retelling of a Zapotec legend by Tony Johnston. In it, Rabbit outwits Coyote.
  • Rabbit Makes a Monkey of Lion: A Swahili Tale by Verna Aardema - Rabbit and his friends play tricks on the regal but somewhat dim-witted lion, King of the Forest, in an attempt to steal his honey.
  • Big Trouble for Tricky Rabbit; Native American Trickster Tales and Here Comes Tricky Rabbit!: Native American Trickster Tales by Gretchen Will Mayo includes trickster rabbits from Native American legends.
  • Peter Rabbit (aka Peter Cottontail) in Thornton Burgess's Old Mother West Wind series is also something of a trickster.
  • The title characters of Enid Blytons book The Adventures of Binkle and Flip are a pair of mischievous rabbits.


Music[]

  • In 1984, American composer Van Dyke Parks produced a children's album, Jump!, based on the Brer Rabbit Tales.
  • In the popular Hip-Hop band The Flobots, one of Emcees names is Br'er Rabbit.
  • "The Creggan White Hare" is about a beautiful, crafty creature who eludes capture


Mythology and Oral Tradition[]

  • Brer Rabbit is a central figure in the Uncle Remus stories of the Southern United States. He is a trickster character who succeeds by his wits rather than by brawn, tweaking authority figures and bending social mores as he sees fit. The story of Br'er Rabbit, a contraction of "Brother Rabbit", has been linked to both African and Native American cultures.
  • In Africa, the hare figures prominently in the storytelling traditions in Western, Central and Southern Africa. These tales continue to be part of the traditional folklore of numerous peoples throughout those regions. In the Akan traditions of West Africa, the trickster is usually the spider Anansi, though the plots of spider tales are often identical to those of rabbit stories.
    • In West Africa, many tribal cultures, such as the Yoruba of Nigeria and the Wolof of Senegal, have traditional story cycles about an irrepressible hare trickster who is equal parts rascal, clown, and culture hero.
    • In Central Africa, "Kalulu" the rabbit is widely known as a tricky character, getting the better of bargains
    • In one pan–African story, the Moon sends Hare, her divine messenger, down to earth to give mankind the gift of immortality. "Tell them," she says, "that just as the Moon dies and rises again, so shall you." But Hare, in the role of trickster buffoon, manages to get the message wrong, bestowing mortality instead and bringing death to the human world.
  • Rabbits feature as tricksters in the mythology of many Native American cultures.
    • It is believed that the the Creeks and the Cherokee in particular contributed to the development of the Brer Rabbit stories.
    • In Anishinaabe mythology, particularly among the Ojibwa, Nanabozho is a spirit, and figures prominently in their storytelling, including the story of the world's creation. Nanabozho is the Ojibwe trickster figure and culture hero.
    • The Centzon Totochtin in Aztec mythology are a group of 400 rabbit gods who represent drunkenness, parties, and fertility.
    • In Potawatomi myth, Wabosso is the Great White Hare (and the younger brother of Nanabozho) who travels north to become the greatest of magicians among the supernaturals
    • The Utes tell the story of Ta–vwots, the Little Rabbit, who shatters the sun and destroys the world, all of which must be created again
    • An Omaha rabbit brings the sun down to earth while trying to catch his own shadow.
    • Among the Micmac and Passamaquoddy of the Northeast coast it is Mahtigwess the Rabbit who is a powerful trickster. Rabbit has m'te'olin, great magical powers.
    • The rabbit is the trickster animal for the Seminoles and the Miccosukees.
  • In Celtic Mythology, a puca is a shapeshiffing trickster that has a rabbit as one of is forms.
  • There are a number of Central American stories about Juan Thul, a trickster rabbit.
  • Chinese idioms dating to at least the Warring States Period about the rascaliness of rabbits: "The Clever Hare Has Three Nests" and "Once the Clever Hare is Dead, the Dog is Cooked".
  • In the Panchatantra tales of India, Hare is a wily trickster whose cleverness and cunning is pitted against Elephant and Lion.
  • In Tibetan folktales, quick-thinking Hare outwits the ruses of predatory Tiger.
  • In Japan, the fox is the primary trickster animal, but hares also are clever, tricky characters. Usually depicted as male (whereas fox tricksters are most often female), hares in Japanese folktales tend to be crafty, clownish, mischievous figures.


Theatre[]

  • Silly Rabbit, Tricksters Are for Kids is a collection of trickster tales from around the world, including "Brer Rabbit", "Brer Alligator in Trouble", and "Tio Conejo (Uncle Rabbit) and Raven".


Western Animation[]


Other[]