The Serpent And The Rainbow Summary

Improved Essays
Writing Assignment #11: Rebecca Wilson Dr. Wade Davis is a noted Harvard ethnobotanist and is author of the book “The Serpent and the Rainbow.” In this book he writes about the special ingredients that bokor’s use to make “zombie powder”. All of these ingredients can be found anywhere in Haiti, but it takes a special magic, spell to conjure the ingredients into a potion. These ingredients only work during a ritual Vodoun ceremony and will only work if the person truly believes in the ritual, magic of the potion, and zombification prior to the administration of the potion and ritual Vodoun dance. Dr. Wade (1985:162-165), list several ingredients in “zombie powder”, from snakes and different species of toads and frogs to tree leaves and poisonous plants, millipedes and different species of tarantulas; of all these ingredients Dr. Wade believes without a doubt that the poison within different species of puffer fish called tetrodotoxin is the most powerful ingredient within the “zombie powder”. Even though this ingredient was not found in all the samples he brought back from Haiti. …show more content…
Davis talks about the up rise of the slaves during the Haitian revolution and how they over through the French during this time, with little to no experience in hand to hand combat. This was unnecessary because they used different potions and rituals to subdue, weaken, and defeat the army with vodoun magic. The location of these ritual dances and gatherings is usually dark, musky, with several shrines to different deities, animal skulls, and human bones. This is usually considered a sacred place, a place with known magical powers, sometimes located close to or within the boundaries of a cemetery, or temple (Davis

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The Darkest Path Summary

    • 1687 Words
    • 7 Pages

    My book is The Darkest Path by Jeff Hirsch. It is a book with lots of action and adventure. The genre is futuristic fiction and is about two armies fed forces and path forces going to war to control America. The main protagonist is a 13 year old named Cal. He and his brother get captured by path forces when he was eight.…

    • 1687 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Discovery leads to unique renewed perceptions and new understandings, within Jane Harrison’s ‘ Rainbow’s End’ and Gwen Harwood’s ‘ Father and Child’. Harrison and Harwood present Gladys and Dolly from Rainbow’s End and the child and father from Father & Child as characters who convey the aspects of discovery of with the use of both symbolism and other language techniques. Both texts reflect on a feminine and a father and child context using the protagonists. In Rainbow’s…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Rainbow 's End: very renowned author, Maury Klein, writes The Crash of 1929. Klein perhaps could have chosen a more suitable title for this book, but it got his ideas and perceptions of the market crash of 1929 with an intense and gripping fashion. The book tells the story of the stock market crash, also known as “Black Thursday”. Klein is known to be an author of many books on personalities and institutions, which have often taken, center stage in American business, focuses here on financial events and trends leading up to the stock market crash. Klein is a professor of history at the University of Rhode Island who uses this book to introduce the journey of 1920’s through his vision.…

    • 1112 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Sun Also Rises Summary

    • 1520 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The article that I have read is “Don’t Get Drunk, Jake”: Drinking, Drunkenness, and Sobriety in The Sun Also Rises by Donald A. Daiker. This article is mainly about claiming that Jake is not drunk as the whole meaning of the novel is seems that Jake wants to achieve his sobriety rather than to get drunk. He also proves that Jake is trying to achieve sobriety in his life based on the amount of alcohol that he had consumed, his drunkenness level and also his intention of consuming alcohol is more towards getting a state of composure in his life instead of just to get drunk without any intention. In my opinion, I agree with the writer statement about Jake didn’t gets drunk because he wants to achieve his sobriety after he has experienced a bad…

    • 1520 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The films: Vodou Kingdon, Divine Horsemen, The King Does Not Lie, and Rastamentary explore Afro-Carribean religions by studying, and filming the practices of the Vodou, Santería and Rastafarian religions. These films depict different practices, rituals, ceremonies, ways of living and thought processes. While the religions being depicted are based in islands such as Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica; the very soul of these religions derived from the mother land of Africa. Each film is uniquely diverse, depicting the religions in different ways. The films not only highlight its religion of focus, but it also highlights their connections to Africa, allowing viewers to easily identify similarities within these Afro-Caribbean religions.…

    • 1766 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Island Possessed: Presentation Paper Island Possessed by Katherine Dunham is a beautiful introduction to Haiti. The book is comprised of stories, recollections and historical facts about the island that spare no details; good or bad. But the book causes the reader to reevaluate the definitions of good and bad while reading. Is good really good and is bad just different? Her articulation of emotions toward the historical Haitians, Haitian Vaudun culture and the people put into perspective how uniquely possessed this island really is.…

    • 2531 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    Where did our twenty-first century incarnations of the zombie come from, and how did they develop as time elapsed? James Parker’s “Our Zombies, Ourselves” discusses several of the past and present zombies, their stereotypical designs, and how different medias portray society’s definition of a zombie. One of the first subjects Parker covers is that of society’s preconception of the undead. We, and apparently everyone else dating back to the early 1900s, imagine the zombie as abysmally lethargic, with greyed skin, mutilated limbs, and an unending desire to consume living flesh. Parker regales the reader with a tale of the zombie’s evolution through poetry, books, movies, television, and even songs.…

    • 1571 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    From television to novels to haunted houses, these monsters have become an influence not only in the realms of fantasy but in reality. The intrigue for these monsters comes not from the scares they provide, but rather how they mirror the lives of people across the world. Through his essay, My Zombie, Myself, Chuck Klosterman is able to effectively utilize allusions, anecdotes, and figurative language while exploring how the image of the zombie is embedded into society in order to illustrate how the lives of people in reality is not that far from the lives of those in the midst of the…

    • 1272 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In 1789, there were 452,000 black slaves compared to between 60,000 to 80,000 whites and free people of color in Haiti (Hogan). The slaves vastly outnumbered their masters, yet were treated terribly. Slaves were regularly tortured and killed, and food was insufficient. If a slave was caught eating crops in the fields, they had a muzzle put on. After the French Revolution, slaves were worried that the French colonists would use their new liberties to treat the slaves even worse than they already were.…

    • 1432 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    Throughout different generations, ideas and values begin to vary. What was once considered an uncommon way of living is now becoming more normal in today’s society. Older generations are less accepting of these differences because of the time period in which they grew up. In the story, “Snakes,” written by Danielle Evans, these changing concepts are seen through the actions, values, and moods of Tara, her mother, and her grandmother. The grandmother, Lydia, is a southern Caucasian who grew up in a generation in which the people were not as open-minded to differences having to do with race.…

    • 1454 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Haiti Health Care Essay

    • 2468 Words
    • 10 Pages

    The French established their presence in the 17th century. In 1697, Spain ceded to the French and the western half of the island later became known as Haiti. The French were able to run sugar-related industries becoming one of the wealthiest in the Caribbean, but only due to the importation of slaves and environmental degradation. In the late 18th century, Haiti’s slaves revolted declaring their independence in 1804” (CIA, 2016). From the start Haiti’s success depended on the slaves that were brought into the county for their labor.…

    • 2468 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Summary Of Pan's Labyrinth

    • 2334 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Pan’s Labyrinth – Literature Review I. Introduction The history of Spain and its political and social position depends heavily on the Spanish Civil War. There were several complexities and interventions in the war, by countries, leaders and organizations. One method of portraying these complexities is by the use of creative expressions of resistance, for instance through the use of film direction and animation.…

    • 2334 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I want to continue with narrative’s model; frame of reference. When Gravity’s Rainbow points to the fact that gravity is a fictitious force and the related concept of their control has to be rethought, it never loses sight of the fact that the effects of gravity cannot be ignored. Pynchon’s novel thus does not present a world where “reality has become as relative as time and space”, as more than one critic has claimed, but Gravity’s Rainbow’s vision as well as its narrative structure is better understood in the more detailed terms of relativity theory that the text introduces in relation to gravity. The novel’s narrative structure, as well as its metaphorical use of relativity theory with the elevator experiment at its center, does not support…

    • 164 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Devils Tale

    • 152 Words
    • 1 Pages

    Hello, I am Brittanie Waddell, editor of my school newspaper, The Devils' Tale, at Tallmadge High School. The Devils' Tale is a student-run newspaper that gets distributed to students and staff at the high school along with throughout the community. I realize that you and Victoria Aveyard are very busy people. I was just curious if it is possible for me to get an interview with Victoria Aveyard about her Red Queen series.…

    • 152 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Before this class I really didn’t give are much thought but now I have come to learn and appreciate that are is not only pretty pictures or statues. There are different reasons and uses for pieces of art, intended by the artist. Artists use many different colors, textures and techniques to reach their different audiences. Along with materials and objects, space and time period also influence art. No matter what the artist portrays, the audiences perceive it and appreciate it in different ways.…

    • 789 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays