Anansi: The Spider
Anansi the spider trickster: origins, key traits, each story he appears in, the web as symbol, and how Campbell uses him to explore wit, resilience, and survival.
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Anansi the spider trickster: origins, key traits, each story he appears in, the web as symbol, and how Campbell uses him to explore wit, resilience, and survival.
The Captain and the Boy as a foil pair: authority, conscience, complicity, and the moral question the play leaves unresolved.
The Girl's arc from terrified captive to storyteller, her key quotes, how Campbell develops her through dramatic technique, and exam application.
The Woman's role as elder, storyteller, and spiritual guide, her riddles, her invisibility as a staging choice, and her thematic significance.
Tiger, Snake, Mancrow, Soliday, Gran, and Ratbat: roles, allegorical significance, key moments, and exam application.
The opening ship scenes: the cabin, the deck, the hold. The Captain and Boy, the Girl's arrival, and the first exchange between Girl and Woman.
The Woman introduces the Anansi spider, poses the first riddle, and tells the stories of Naming the Stories and Tricking Snake. The Girl begins to learn.
Bodies are thrown overboard, the second riddle points to the soul, and the Woman tells the Mancrow story: Soliday, Gran, and the six arrows. The Boy questions God.
The Captain destroys the Boy's diary. The Woman falls sick and is taken away. Between these events, Anansi outsmarts Tiger at the pool and Ratbat at Song City.
The auction at Kingston Harbour, the Girl's inner vow, the story of Her and the Calabash, and the final speech: 'Remember her.'