Sunday, June 16, 2024

Father Tales

 

"The Holy Family with a Little Bird,” BartolomĂ© Esteban Murillo, Ca. 1650.

It's Father's Day and in order to celebrate, we're going to look at some of the best dad-related folktales in the oral and literary traditions.


1. Untitled myth about Ares. The Library by pseudo-Apollodorus mentions an incident where a son of Poseidon tried to assault one of his daughter. Ares killed the guy to protect her. When Poseidon took Ares to court, he was acquitted.


2. "The Black Dragon and the Red Dragon." In this Turkish narrative, a man's children are kidnapped and he goes on an epic quest to retrieve them. He also helps a mother dragon reunite with her young.


3. "The Good Stepmother." Despite the title, this Icelandic tale features a wonderfully thoughtful king. After his wife dies he refuses to remarry because he fears that a stepmother will abuse his daughter. It's not until his brother vows to find a good woman that he relents. His fiancée even ends up saving the princess.


4. "The Doomed Prince" This ancient Egyptian text, with its lost ending, begins with a pharaoh wanting to know his son's destiny. The prophetesses tell him that the boy will die. He tries to keep his son in a tower in an effort to protect him, but eventually allows the boy to leave and live his own life.


5. "The Smith and the Fairies." A Scottish changeling tale in which a boy is abducted and enslaved by the fair folk and his father ventures into their domain to rescue him.


Fun fact: biological fathers experience sympathetic pregnancy symptoms.

Friday, June 7, 2024

Miserably Ever After: Fairy Tales with Sad Endings

 


"Happily ever after" is the most famous closing formula for fairy tales in the Anglosphere. But plenty of folktales, even traditional fairy tales, end on a real down note. It's not be a pleasant aspect of the genre (naturally), but it adds dynamism to it.

The Fisherman and His Wife

The Adventure of Cherry of Zennor

The Angel of Death

The Story of the Man Who Went to Wake His Luck

Yallery Brown

There's even a book about narratives, old and new, that upend our expectations: Anti-Tales: The Uses of Disenchantment by Catriona McAra.

Variants of "The Maiden Who Seeks Her Brothers" (ATU 451)

  "Six Swans" by Elenore Abbott in  Grimm's Fairy Tales . New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1920. A group of brothers are...