Reblogged from Strange Goings On in the Shed:
Many of us have grown up with the older versions of fairy tales, visceral stories that were handed down from generation to generation. I certainly recall the earlier folk tales, devouring each tale with zeal, especially those of the Brothers Grimm. The Brothers collected and revised an enormous number of oral and written narratives covering a breadth of folklore traditions. Many of these have been cannibalised by Disney and the film industry, transformed into either sickly sweet concoctions or vehicles dripping in blood and nothing else. Being a lover of things gothic, this writer revels in the exploration of mysteries hiding in the great forests of the imagination. Where’s the harm in breaking through the hardened layers of bland camouflage to reveal the reality of nature ‘red in tooth and claw’. It’s plain where I stand but not a viewpoint many would agree with.
With tongue firmly in cheek I now march forward in this short and irreverent take on a few favourites. These fairy tales have a subtext that’s worth exploring. Nothing is as it seems, which makes them worth reading. They’re not sanitised but exist in forms that aren’t easy to face. We must ask ourselves why this is so.
Rapunzel
Rapunzel is the result of a magical pregnancy due to her mother eating rapunzel lettuce from a sorceress’s garden. The child is demanded as payment by the sorceress and whisked away to a lonely tower in a remote forest at the age of 12. Her only company is the old woman until the fateful day years later a handsome prince comes by and ends up knowing her in the biblical sense. Their trysts do not remain a secret and results in Rapunzel losing her glorious hair and the prince trying to commit suicide, becoming blind and the pregnant woman being banished into the ends of the earth. The prince finds her eventually, a mother of twins, miraculously recovering his sight. They live happily ever after. What do we have here? Child trafficking and teenage pregnancy.
Cinderella
The familiar tale of bereavement and difficult relations with new stepfamily. Cinderella’s mother dies and her father remarries but life turns out to be very difficult for her. Relegated to the position of a servant she leads a terrible life, everything taken away from her including her father by her stepmother and stepsisters.
Continue reading: Fairy tales: Faces Glimpsed in the Forest
This is really interesting, Sue. I love these tales – what about HC Anderson, think of the original Little Mermaid and the Little Match Girl…
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I found HC Andersen’s tales very spiritual though sad!
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I wonder what their origins were?
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As a child I cried for the little match girl! I did a post about her at Christmas. She touched me deeply. The way Anderson gave her a voice- at seeing a star fall – her memory. And of course thinking of a child out in the cold – pathos and tragedy.!!
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There was a lot of real teaching in the old tales that we have lost by softeing them for modern consumption
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I agree!
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They are odd tales for children, on the surface, at least. But think how much Disney has sanitised many of the old tales; I wonder how far the brothers Grrimm and Andersen also sanitised the even older folk tales upon which they drew?
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I love this and it almost how I remember these tales from childhood, though the connotations did not come to me until I was older! xxxxx
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There is a lifetime’s worth of study to even find the original versions, let alone begin to understand them. Stuart is looking at some of the symbolism in Rapunzel at present on his blog 😉
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I do love the old tales, too scary for children to my mind,. I shall check Stuart’s blog out more carefully 🙂
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I think we have lost a great deal by protecting children from the darker side of life so well. These were stories with something to teach about life and how to live it… and children love to be terified in safety 😉
The first of the Rapunzel posts starts with our trip to Avalon, then carries on from there: https://somethingferal.com/2017/02/05/mother-earth-mound/
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Thanks Sue as soon as I get back from this dog walk I shall have a look. xxx
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I stillhave our second to go yet…and should get a shift on, I suppose! xx
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Yes it will be dark soon! 😘
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🙂
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I loved being somewhat horrified by the old tales!!
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I think most of us did 🙂
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Reblogged this on The Owl Lady.
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And thank you, yet again 🙂 xx
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