Fairytales and Social Codes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Fairytales and Social Codes

Description:

Fairytales and Social Codes Vulnerability, Imagination, and the Transition from Childhood to Adulthood The Tales The Brothers Grimm wrote, in the introduction to one ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:213
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: RICKA150
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Fairytales and Social Codes


1
Fairytales and Social Codes
  • Vulnerability, Imagination, and the Transition
    from Childhood to Adulthood

2
The Tales
  • The Brothers Grimm wrote, in the introduction to
    one of their books
  • . . . Every society, and every age, produced
    its own version of the same tales. (John
    Connolly, The Book of Lost Things, 343)

3
Tales for Children
  • Tap into childhood awareness
  • Life is likely to have pain and loss
  • Humans are powerless against mortality
  • Children know they are vulnerable

4
Tales for Children
  • Affirmative stories
  • Challenges can and must be overcome
  • Transition from childhood to adulthood
  • Facing fears
  • Understanding ourselves and the world

5
Common Elements
  • Animals
  • Childhood fears
  • Symbolic references
  • Fantastic elements
  • Another world

6
Common Elements (continued)
  • Riddles/rhymes
  • Helpers (often magical)
  • Lessons learned
  • Tricksters

7
Elements of Fairytales The Trickster
  • Creator, transformer, joker, truth-teller,
    destroyer
  • Shape-shifter All things to all people
  • Rule-breaker Theft, trickery
  • Mischievous, sometimes malicious
  • Tears things down but often builds them back up,
    or enables others to do so
  • Often folktale animals
  • Roots in ancient myths

8
The Trickster
  • Creator, destroyer
  • Loki Norse god tricks the blind Hod into
    killing his twin brother, Balder, with an arrow
    of mistletoe
  • Punished by having poison dripped on him
  • Will help bring about Ragnarok, the return of the
    gods

9
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileLoke_og_Sigyn_by
_Eckersberg.jpg
10
The Trickster
  • Folktale animals and
  • Reynard the Fox (France) William
  • Caxton printed the story
  • in late 15th century
  • Always in trouble talks his
  • way out
  • Causes trouble, often
  • malicious rule-breaker

11
The Trickster
  • Creation
  • Raven creates the world in Inuit and Northwest
    native traditions
  • Maui of the Thousand Tricks captures the sun to
    slow it down, but does it so his mother has more
    time to cook for him it is a side effect that
    humans benefit

12
Bringer of Culture
  • Prometheus brings fire, but so do Loki, Anansi
    (African), Raven, Coyote, and Maui (Maori)
  • Anansi brings stories to man by tricking
    Nyankopon the Sky-God
  • Qat (a spider, Banks Island, northern Canada),
    teaches humans to sleep and brings death

13
The Trickster
  • Cunning AND foolish sometimes
  • Coyote steals a horse in one story, and nearly
    drowns trying to eat berries in another
  • In just one collection of coyote stories, coyote
    dies of a snake bite, gunshot, an arrow wound, a
    broken heart, a rock fall, and a drowning
    (Roadrunner?)

14
The Trickster
  • What Crow Would Say to the Dalai Lama
  •    Do you come to this bloated madhouse,this
    bedlamto offer us palliatives or do you come
    hereto help usbreak out of the asylum
  •   So become a crow, Your Holinessthat's
    right, become a crow
  • Make noise,make noise and wake the
    inmates of thisvast corporate paradise
  • Flap your wings,flap your wings and
    startlethe wardenStrike with your beak,for
    sure, strike with your beak,and warn of
    dangerwarn of danger
  • That's what I have to say 
  • - Steven Raskin

15
Trickster role
  • Those who encounter him must face their own
    deficiencies, or those of society
  • In destruction, leads to creation of better
    structures
  • Human psyche unrestricted by convention,
    imagination, confronting and overcoming our
    problems

16
Fairy Tale Tricksters
  • Robin Goodfellow (Puck)
  • English sprite or fairy
  • Made famous by Shakespeare in A Midsummer Nights
    Dream

Welsh Version, Medieval Period
William Blake, 1785
17
Fairy Tale Tricksters
  • Shakespeares Puck
  • That shrewd and knavish spriteCall'd Robin
    Goodfellow are not you heThat frights the
    maidens of the villagerySkim milk, and
    sometimes labour in the quernAnd bootless make
    the breathless housewife churnAnd sometime make
    the drink to bear no barmMislead
    night-wanderers, laughing at their harm?Those
    that Hobgoblin call you and sweet Puck,You do
    their work, and they shall have good luckAre
    not you he?

18
Fairy Tale Tricksters
  • The not-obviously-charming prince stories
  • A king poses trials for young men to win his
    daughters hand in marriage
  • All the usual suspects apply
  • No one has the right stuff
  • A young man who appears to be a peasant
    (sometimes royalty in disguise) tries

19
Fairy Tale Tricksters
  • The not-obviously-charming prince stories
    (continued)
  • Avoids or defeats monsters, villains, and
    assorted dangers not through power but by
    unorthodox means
  • Uses cleverness and wit to win the princess, and
    they all live happily ever after

20
Rumpelstiltskin
  • Variation of a trickster
  • Benevolence?
  • Some versions allow him to escape at the end
  • Other characters are greedy he is at least up
    front with his demands
  • Feels some pity for the girl

21
Modern Tricksters
  • Q from Star Trek
  • Wisakejak and Pookah (Ghost Master)
  • Aang (Avatar)
  • Bugs Bunny
  • Impossible Man (Fantastic Four)
  • The Mask
  • The Pink Panther
  • Mr. Mxyzptlk (Superman)
  • Wiley Coyote
  • The Roadrunner
  • Bart Simpson
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com