I
really like fairy tales and while I can’t exactly speak for why people still
enjoy reading them after all this time, I know that I like them because the
originals, at least, demonstrate a level of cruelty and brutality that isn’t
found in modern versions of the same stories. That’s not to say the modern ones
aren’t good, too, but the originals were more true to life, while still being
fantastical, just in different ways. Real life is painful and bloody, and
sometimes if you really want something you can’t have, you have to cut off your
toe or your heel in order to fit into the role you want for yourself. Maybe
that wasn’t the message I was supposed to get from Cinderella, but it does sound pretty true. People are willing to do
ridiculous and painful things in order to get what they want. And sometimes you
can do everything right, you can work really hard to get what you want, without
hurting anyone in the process, and still be pushed off a tower by a witch and
blinded by thorns. At least fairy tales leave you with the promise that,
despite being blinded through no fault of your own other than making the wrong
witch angry, maybe you can still find your princess (and newborn twins, oops)
and live happily ever after. Metaphorically speaking, that is.
Life
sucks, and nobody could tell us that better than Hansel and Gretel, I think.
Not only were they starving, but their stepmother obviously wanted them dead,
ordering her husband—their father—to leave them in the woods to fend for
themselves. And their father actually did it?! It seems unreal, but we see
stories like this on the news all the time, with people who everyone says “would
never hurt anyone” doing terrible things to each other, sometimes out of
desperation, sometimes out of love, and sometimes because they are just
honestly terrible people. This part of the story absolutely rings true. The
part with the witch…well, yeah, it’s very unlikely you’re going to run into an
edible house owned by a witch who wants to eat you, but their lives already
pretty much sucked, so it’s not too surprising, within the story. As for the
duck at the end, well, we discussed in class how they were lost and obviously
couldn’t trust any adults in their lives, so a talking animal is the best guide
they could have. And even despite all this, despite everything happening
because their father couldn’t say no to his wife, couldn’t say, “Hey, these are
my kids! How about I leave you in the
woods instead?” they accept him when they return home. That’s a level of
forgiveness I think I would like to have, even if it may seems silly and naïve.
Speaking
of silly and naïve, I think remembering that Snow White is 7 years old in the
original story is really important. At 7, she is pure and innocent, but also
young and naïve, which is how the queen was able to trick her several times. I
think this story is as much about hospitality toward strangers than about not
being an evil person or you’ll be forced to dance in hot iron shoes until you
die (again, metaphorically). The dwarves are unendingly hospitable to Snow
White, allowing her to stay in their house in return for cleaning, taking care
of her by warning her not to open the door for anyone, and when they think she
is dead, they make a beautiful coffin for her. They are under no obligation to
do anything for her, but they do. Then we have Snow White, who tries to be
hospitable in return to the old peddler woman (despite the dwarves’ warnings)
and it backfires on her, multiple times. Is Snow White just a poor judge of
character, or are the dwarves wrong to trust Snow White, simply based on the
fact that she is a young girl? Maybe the fact that the old woman can’t be trusted more accurately
illustrates how evil she is, that she takes advantage of Snow White’s hospitality,
and tries to kill her anyway. Hospitality toward strangers was definitely
valued in medieval society, so I can’t imagine that the story is conveying the
message that strangers are not to be trusted. Even if she is naïve, Snow White’s
kindness toward strangers is considered a virtue, and her goodness makes the queen
seem that much more evil. In modern society, we definitely still have our “Snow
Whites” and our “evil queens,” those people who are so good and pure that
anyone who is mean to them (though hopefully not to the same extent) is seen as
even worse in comparison to their goodness. Although I would say hospitality is
still praised in modern society, we are also much more suspicious, to the
extent that we can’t easily understand why Snow White would continue to trust
an old peddler woman after being tricked several times.
I like the fairy tales, too. They might be my favorite thing we read in class. Your concept of the originals relating to modern life makes a lot of sense, and I agree with it. I think the original fairy tales showed that life is not always perfect and bad things happen. They have changed over the years to show that happy endings are the only endings, but that's not true, and the original fairy tales depicted that.
ReplyDeleteI too enjoy a good fairy tale, however my one gripe with the majority of the original fairy tales is they were very short and had big discrepencies in them, like big plot holes and such. I prefer longer stories so they can give more background and go into more depth to allo myself to really get immersed into the story. With the short fairy tales there is no time to allow your self to get into the story before it is over, so you also dont get any real attachment to the characters.
ReplyDelete"Fairy tales, then, are not responsible for producing in children fear, or any of the shapes of fear; fairy tales do not give the child the idea of the evil or the ugly; that is in the child already, because it is in the world already. Fairy tales do not give the child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon. Exactly what the fairy tale does is this: it accustoms him for a series of clear pictures to the idea that these limitless terrors had a limit, that these shapeless enemies have enemies in the knights of God, that there is something in the universe more mystical than darkness, and stronger than strong fear."
ReplyDelete-C.K. Chesterton
Tremendous Trifles (1909), XVII: "The Red Angel"
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Chesterton
And that's why we keep coming back to fairy tales, Charlie Brown.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteOk I have totally been waiting for someone to do a fairytale rant hahaha! I love this so much! But I too have to agree, these fairy tales, yet fun to listen to and read about, they do give a good idea that not everything goes our way and can always be peachy.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading the fairy tales only because I used to do it so much when I was a kid. Little Red Riding Hood has always been my favorite. I never thought I would look at them in such a critical way!
ReplyDeleteI agree with liking the darker side of the fairy tales. They do make much more sense in reality than say - Tangled by Disney.
ReplyDeleteI have to say I really enjoyed the segment of class that we read fairytales because even though some of them can be a bit gruesome by the end of the story there is always some sort of wisdom that has been given to the reader.
ReplyDelete