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 12:23 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-