I'm having trouble breathing. This is a fantastic short story - ethereal, clean, with elements just beyond what you can (or want to) grasp. And this folk tale has always haunted me:
Half Flight
My favorite retelling of it was "Daughter of the Forest," by Juliet Marillier. Look it up. But don't waste time on the sequels.
A catalogue of the writer's thoughts - particularly those more organized, relevant, and creative.
Showing posts with label fairy tale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fairy tale. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Till by broad spreading it disperses to naught.
I read an article by Terri Windling this afternoon that examines Rapunzel, the fairy tale. You can read it on the Journal of Mythic Arts' archive site, here: Rapunzel, Rapunzel, Let Down Your Hair.
I remember having read a literary examination of Rapunzel before, but the woman in the tower never really caught my attention. I wrote essays about the madwoman in the attic, but never made a connection to the woman in the tower.
But the most interesting part of the essay (for me) was how Windling catalogues the watering-down of fairy tales. The originals are potent, meaning-laden tales that weren't simply crafted as a means to conveying a moral end - they were written for the beauty of the thing itself. And as they are picked down to the bones and restructured and bent to the shape of someone's political leanings over the centuries, they become sparse skeletons of what they once were. They become carriers for moral opinion, tools to convince children to behave.
I think it's a trend that is easily identifiable in thousands of aspects of modern life: we're wading through a mess of brittle, tired beauty. Kind of supports the deterioration of the universe theory, what's it called? Right. The Second Law of Thermodynamics. From order into disorder.
Glad I can be so chipper for you all this lovely, sunshiny Wednesday! Ha!
I remember having read a literary examination of Rapunzel before, but the woman in the tower never really caught my attention. I wrote essays about the madwoman in the attic, but never made a connection to the woman in the tower.
But the most interesting part of the essay (for me) was how Windling catalogues the watering-down of fairy tales. The originals are potent, meaning-laden tales that weren't simply crafted as a means to conveying a moral end - they were written for the beauty of the thing itself. And as they are picked down to the bones and restructured and bent to the shape of someone's political leanings over the centuries, they become sparse skeletons of what they once were. They become carriers for moral opinion, tools to convince children to behave.
I think it's a trend that is easily identifiable in thousands of aspects of modern life: we're wading through a mess of brittle, tired beauty. Kind of supports the deterioration of the universe theory, what's it called? Right. The Second Law of Thermodynamics. From order into disorder.
Glad I can be so chipper for you all this lovely, sunshiny Wednesday! Ha!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)