posted on May, 24 2005 @ 02:28 PM
I took a course on German Fairytales (Märchen) while I was in college......Sounds like an easy class but I assure you it was not....
At their very root, they are stories that have been told from generation to generation....In most cases there is not a single author, but rather it's
a living tale that grows as it spreads.....Now compiled into books and websites, they've lost much of their oral history....But they're still very
much alive...
They usually center around an underlying moral that is "dressed in wolves clothes" so to speak....Or often the theme is right out in the open....
You can see the "evolution" of these tales by looking at the Grimm's revised versions of their compellations....Or by checking out the cultural
differences between the very same fairytales transcribed in different languages....Not to mention the removal of quite a few nasty bits from the
original German....
Then take these great legends, myths, and fairy tales of yesteryear and apply them to our world today - We still use their wisdom and wit....
A great example would be Gunter Grass' use of the fairy tale "The Fisherman's Wife" in his novel "The Flounder"
Here's a few interesting links for you to check out:
The DNA of Fairy Tales: Their Origin and Meaning
Cultural Connections
Stories, Folklore, and Fairy Tales
[edit on 5/24/2005 by EnronOutrunHomerun]