Once upon a time, there was a young girl who was truly
enamored of fairy tales, but kept finding little
things about the stories she was reading or watching that nagged at her.
Why didn’t Cinderella’s glass slipper change into a ratty
old shoe at midnight when everything else did? Then, at least, it would have
narrowed down the pool of subjects the prince had to go door-to-door to.
Why were the fathers all so crappy? The love of a father for
his child was often mentioned, but where were the actions to back up these claims? The fathers of
Cinderella and Snow White apparently loved their daughters whole heartedly, but
were too dumb not to notice that they were marrying horrific, abusive women. Hansel
and Gretel’s dad was said to love them tons too, but ditched them in the forest
twice. And only took them back at the end because his wife died. Father of the
year, right there. The miller basically sold his daughter to the King under
false pretense, leading to that whole Rumplestiltskin fiasco. But at least he
never really pretended to be overly enamored with his offspring. So….that’s
something, maybe?
Why were all the stepmothers evil? I knew a number of
stepmothers, all of them were lovely people. So, it never made sense to me that
every single stepmother in fairy tales wanted nothing more than to kill off all
the children. I believed in all sorts of magic and mayhem, but this strange
stereotype was too unrealistic for my young mind.
The questions went on and on. Probably because I kept going
back to all the stories over and over. I loved them and they drove me crazy.
I’m not the only one who has cast a skeptical eye toward
these classic tales, of course. There are tons of different takes out there. My
father told me stories where Ariel
stayed a mermaid. In high school, I was introduced to Into the Woods and Shrek,
both of which, I was happy to see showed that happy endings aren’t always what
we expect them to be. When I was in
college, one particularly awesome roommate used to read stories to me from
James Finn Garner’s Politically Correct
Bedtime Stories. (Nothing speeds you off to sleep like Red Riding Hood’s
stirring speech to the sexist, speciesist woodsman.) And now, I get to regularly
enjoy blogs and tumblrs like “Introvert
Fairy Tales” and “fairy
tales for twentysomethings.”
All of these things have been on my mind a lot lately, as I
work on a new
story. And I think I’ve figured out what the real magic of fairy tales is –
They can be whatever we want them to be.
So what are your favorites, be they traditional or
reimaginings?
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