Favorite Folktales?
Apr. 23rd, 2013 02:16 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
What are your favorite folktales with female protagonists?
I'll accept anything with unknown author as "Folktale" whether it's a parable, a legend, a saga, a fairytale, or whatever.
I guess I don't mind knowing about works with known authors too provided you cite the author's name for reference.
But I'm really looking for the kinds of patterns that primarily manifest when a story has gotten told and retold and reshaped and retold over time, rather than a single person's idea of a good story, however grounded in tradition it may be.
-E-
I'll accept anything with unknown author as "Folktale" whether it's a parable, a legend, a saga, a fairytale, or whatever.
I guess I don't mind knowing about works with known authors too provided you cite the author's name for reference.
But I'm really looking for the kinds of patterns that primarily manifest when a story has gotten told and retold and reshaped and retold over time, rather than a single person's idea of a good story, however grounded in tradition it may be.
-E-
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-07 12:17 am (UTC)'Course some of the classics have their charm too - Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Thumbelina, The Princess and the Frog, lots of others... each is challenging in its own way but there's value from each to be gleaned for sure.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-07 12:23 am (UTC)Vasilisa the Beautiful, East of the Sun, and Thousandfurs are the top individual stories in my list, but again, not sure which rendition of the Thousandfurs pattern I want to use.
I realize that I seem to go for Cinderella stories where the protagonist is more proactive (which both Thousandfurs and Vasilisa represent), but I like some of the other patterns too, including the Beauty and the Beast pattern, again, preferring renditions with a more proactive lead.
-E-