One Fairy Story too Many: The Brothers Grimm and Their Tales by John M. Ellis is good for anyone who's interested in fairy tale history, or conspiracy theories.I've read other books on the Brothers Grimm, so I knew that they weren't entirely truthful about where they got their tales, and that they doctored them up a bit. But either the other sources didn't come down on the Grimms quite as hard as Ellis, or I still wanted to believe that the Grimms were merely guilty of a little exaggerating, but not outright lying. That's another thing Ellis exposed-how for years, condemning facts about the Grimms were known, yet scholars who had access to the material did a bit of covering up themselves, also to the point of outright lying (This book was published in 1983-scholars share the facts now but virtually nothing was made known before this). For some reason, no one wants to believe that the Grimm fairy tales aren't completely authentic.
Gustav Tenggren-The Frog Prince
Image of the Sleeping Beauty by Anne Anderson
Now, when one does compare the texts, it doesn't seem at first that many of the additions changed the meaning. Yet many of the changes in language "intended to clarify meaning, and to explain the events more thoroughly," (59), and the Grimms therefore "committed the story to a particular kind of explanation and excluded another" (62). Some scholars tried to excuse the inconsistencies by saying Jacob was faithful to the original tales and Wilhelm later went through and made the stylistic changes, but though Wilhem did do much of the work for the later editions, the brothers worked together to create the first edition, which was where the most changes occured.
And though, to me, I assumed from the original, simpler text, the same meanings of events that were later stated by the Grimms, I realized it was probably because I'm so familiar with the more common, Grimmified versions of the tales, so I can't possibly read the original manuscripts in an unbiased way-I automatically put my own pre-assumptions into the events of the tale. My copies of the KHM (and any you find in bookstores today) are both based off the latest editions, therefore the ones most tampered with.

Hansel and Gretel-by Kay Nielsen
Ellis explains reasons for many of the changes to the KHM-"purging the KHM of content they found objectionable: successful crime, sex, suicide, illegitimate birth, wanton violence by children and family members. In the final collection, this kind of content is minimized; crime is punished; only the good prosper; relations between sexes are reduced to clickes which do not allow sexual promiscuity, immorality, or incest to come into view; only sorcerers and witches usually mistreat other people; violence is generally reserved for those who deserve it; and life is too rational and just to allow suicides."
Whew! The above illustrates the classic problems of taking fairy tales that were not originally meant just for children and making them nursury-appropriate. Not only this, but taking tales from times when death and violence and abandoning children were much more common, to the Victorian through modern times where we try to shelter children from such ideas that will unnecessarily frighten them. And though people may disagree on how much we should censor from children, most people agree that there is a difference between adult material and material that is suitable for children. Can I just say that, even with all the moralizing that's been done, I still found it upsetting as a child that the selfish and spoiled Princess from "The Frog Prince" was rewarded with the handome Prince? There is definitely an instinctual desire for right to be rewarded and wrong to be punished and for things to "make sense," for adults as well as children (although how much of this is instinct and how much of this is the patterns of the stories we've grown up with, who knows).
Lastly, Ellis provides thorough studies of the three above pictured tales-Frog Prince, Sleeping Beauty, and Hansel and Gretel-by providing the original manuscripts and three subsequent editions for each tale (in German and in English-which would be great for any German speaking people out there...). It's really good to have the actual texts to compare instead of taking someone else's word for it.


Based off of this 


She also has a fashion blog. This outfit she called her modern Little Red Riding Hood outfit. Makes me want a red hoodie. 




The fact that this picture is "Beauty in the Beast" almost makes me angry. This isn't an image of Beauty and the Beast at all-this is "Little girl having a tea party with her Curious George doll."
Eleanor Vere Boyle
Anonymous illustrator-for Charles Lamb's poem "Beauty and the Beast"
This is going back to the "animals are cute" ideal. Here's my plush Beast, chillin' on my bed with my Belle pillowcase.
But the resemblance is uncanny, non?







First of all, when I saw it was a collection of essays specifically collected by men, that struck me as odd, but as Maria Tatar and Kate Bernheimer remind us in the Foreword and Introduction, in modern times it's very unusual for men to admit interest in fairy tales. In the past, the foremost collectors and theorists on fairy tales were men, but today the only major one that comes to my mind is Jack Zipes, whereas there are a host of women doing wonderful work in the field. Ironic that as academia becomes more infiltrated by women, certain areas of study are pushed aside and thought of as only for women.