| |||||
|
Arts & Entertainment Books Comics Health & Body Media News People Politics2000 Technology - Free Software Project Travel & Food ![]() Columnists
Current Click here to read the latest stories from the wires. - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - Also Today For a full list of today's Salon Mothers Who Think stories, go to the
Mothers Who Think home page. - - - - - - - - - - - - Search Salon - - - - - - - - - - - - Recently in Salon Mothers Who Think Wild Thing Hot Flash Hot Flash Complete archives for Mothers Who Think - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
Wake up, Sleeping Beauty!
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Aug. 20, 1999 |
Indeed, Barbie and fairy tales induce parallel anxieties in
gender-conscious parents. But while Barbie, despite having taken
a critical beating, still dominates the toddler/preteen doll
market, an alternative fairy-tale culture has sprung up in recent
decades for families who don't like their princesses tricked out,
locked up or comatose. This new genre, in which classic stories are revamped or fairy
tale-like narratives are given progressive twists, is not to be
confused with its adult counterpart, penned by authors such as
Anne Sexton, Angela Carter and Margaret Atwood. These are kids'
titles, yet they address adult concerns about fairy tales: that they pit women against each other in struggles for husbands and status; that they're filled with dead mothers and negligent fathers; that they equate virtue with youth and beauty
and promote a feminine ideal of purity and compliance. This last complaint is what drives many current reformers, who do their magic by transforming passive heroines into doers or subverting traditional scenarios in order to skewer the values
the original stories reinforce. Also Today Information on the books mentioned in this story One of the most successful contemporary revisions is Frances Minters' lighthearted "Sleepless Beauty" (Viking, 1996). Written in verse and exquisitely illustrated by G. Brian Karas, it stars a resourceful Beauty who both saves herself and gets her prince. This Beauty grows up in a swank Manhattan apartment. After she pricks her finger on the needle attached to an "old time vinyl record" player brought by a witch who crashes her 14th birthday party, she falls asleep. But in this tale, Beauty calls the shots: Next morning bright and early Beauty writes a thank-you note to the comely rocker whose music helped her "fool the wicked stranger." They meet, and the rest is fairy-tale history. What makes "Sleepless Beauty" so effective is that Minters doesn't compromise her story in the name of upgrading its sexual politics: The witch is creepy, the threat is real and Beauty triumphs romantically in the end. Minters' tale, of course, reworks just one popular rendering of "Sleeping Beauty" -- a saga with many incarnations. One of its earliest recorded versions is Italian Giambattista Basile's "Sun, Moon and Talia," (published in 1636), in which Talia, pricked by a poisonous thorn, falls asleep and gets raped by an opportunistic king. The story later morphed into Charles Perrault's "The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods," and later still into the Grimm Brothers' "Little Briar-Rose." Purists may question the ethics of meddling with such time-tested stories, but a bigger concern might be on which "original" to base a rewrite -- since even classic fairy tales sometimes recycle shared scenarios. As Maria Tatar explains in "Grimm's Grimmest" (Chronicle, 1997), the Grimm Brothers modified their own stories: Originally collected as tabloid-style diversions for adults, the tales were later modified to boost sales, and then again to appeal to children. In the originals, for example, Snow White's stepmother danced to death in hot iron shoes, Cinderella's stepsisters got their eyes pecked out by doves and Rapunzel got pregnant in her tower.
| ||||
Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus
Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.