After
another thoroughly enjoyable set of writings from Hokum, I have decided this is
my favorite book we’ve used so far this semester. Being from the south, I love
the dialect. I was surprised how easily I was able to read it, especially after
hearing how difficult it was for some people to understand.
These
stories and jokes were some of my favorites; I laughed out loud at the punch
line of the joke on page 114 by Bert Williams, which I will quote in full
because it was so good:
Rasmus Bigby used
to play with a little white boy about his age. One day the little pale one was
crying bitterly and his mother says to Rasmus, ‘What’s the matter with Ronald,
Erasmus?’
“He’s cryin’
‘cause I’m eatin’ my cake an’ won’t gib him none.”
“Is his own cake
finished?”
“Yassum. An’ he
cried while I’se eatin’ dat too.”
This line fit
perfectly with a Spongebob episode I remember. After Patrick and Spongebob
“steal” a balloon, they realize they are criminals and leave town, planning on
living on their few belongings. For food, Patrick and Spongebob only had one
chocolate bar each. Of course, when Patrick eats his own chocolate bar
unconsciously, he thinks Spongebob stole his bar: “You took my only food. Now
I’m gonna starve!” Here is the link so you can get the full effect: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMHB-NZY0UQ
I
also have to point out Bert Williams’ first joke in the book because he
mentions the first time he went to the big city…which is of course the best city:
Chattanooga/Chattanoogy/Chatt-town/Chattavegas/Chattaboogie. Chattanooga is
awesome, in case you didn’t know. You should stop by sometime.
The
short story by Rudolph Fisher on King Solomon Gillis and his trip to Harlem was
entertaining as well. The foreshadowing given by the insider’s view into
Uggam’s conversations was well done; I knew something was going to happen, but
the way it happened was a surprise. The story overall was interesting because
there was always a tension between corruption going by unnoticed and being
caught. These stories are great, and I look forward to more of them.
While they are not all humorous, many of them
are simply good stories, even if they portray a pretty ugly subject at times—racism.
Haha just reading this post made me laugh. I thought that the joke you posted was funny in itself, well Hokum is hilarious to me anyways. Yet, you comparing it to SPongebob is quite funny to me for some reason. MAybe because I love Spongebob and never would've once thought I'd be comparing it to an African Humor Book I guess? Regardless I agree with what you're saying and yeah some stories aren't "hilarious" as I say, but sometimes informative and always that underlying racial theme in all of them.
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