Fairy
Tale
Wonder
tale involving marvellous elements and occurrences, though
not necessarily about fairies.
The term
embraces such popular folktales (Märchen, q.v.) as “Cinderella”
and “Puss-in-Boots” and art fairy tales (Kunstmärchen) of
later invention, such as The Happy Prince (1888), by the Irish
writer Oscar Wilde.
It is
often difficult to distinguish between tales of literary and
oral origin, because folktales have received literary treatment
from early times, and, conversely, literary tales have found
their way back into the oral tradition.
Early
Italian collections such as Le piacevoli notti (1550, vol.
1; 1553, vol. 2; “The Pleasant Nights”) of Gianfrancesco Straparola
and Il Pentamerone (1636; originally published [1634] in Neapolitan
dialect as Lo cunto de li cunti) of Giambattista Basile contain
reworkings in a highly literary style of such stories as “Snow
White,” “Sleeping Beauty,” and “The Maiden in the Tower.”
A later
French collection, Charles Perrault's Contes de ma mère l'oye
(1697; Tales of Mother Goose),
including “Cinderella,” “Little Red Ridinghood,” and “Beauty
and the Beast,” remains faithful to the oral tradition, while
the Kinder- und Hausmärchen (1812–15; “Children's and Household
Tales,” generally known as Grimm's Fairy Tales) of the Brothers
Grimm are transcribed directly from oral renderings (although
often from literate informants).
The influence
of Perrault and the Grimms has been very great, and their
versions have been commonly adopted as nursery tales among
literate people in the West. For example, Grimm's “Rumpelstiltskin”
has replaced the native English “Tom Tit Tot,” and Perrault's
“Cinderella” has replaced “Cap o' Rushes,” once almost equally
popular in oral tradition.
Art
fairy tales were cultivated in the period of German Romanticism
by Goethe, Ludwig Tieck, Clemens Brentano, and E.T.A. Hoffmann
and in Victorian England by John Ruskin (The King of the Golden
River, 1851) and Charles Kingsley (The Water-Babies, 1863),
but few of these tales have found permanent popularity.
The master
of the art fairy tale, whose works rank with the traditional
stories in universal popularity, is the Danish writer Hans
Christian Andersen. Though his stories have their roots
in folk legend, they are personal in style and contain elements
of autobiography and contemporary social satire.
Twentieth-century
psychologists, notably Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and Bruno
Bettelheim, have interpreted elements of the fairy tale as
manifestations of universal fears and desires. In his Uses
of Enchantment (1976), Bettelheim asserted that the apparently
cruel and arbitrary nature of many folk fairy stories is actually
an instructive reflection of the child's natural and necessary
“killing off” of successive phases of development and initiation.
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