Fairy Tales & Fables Do modern fairy tales exist?

cressida posted on Feb 10, 2008 at 05:30PM
Just as the title asks, do you believe that there are any modern fairy tales? Or are we stuck in a constant re-telling of the classics?

And for the third and final questions: how would you distinguish between a fairy tale and just a story?

I would argue that if we do have modern fairy tales, they are the ones about Tom Sawyer, the stories of Frances Hodgson Burnett [A Little Princess, The Secret Garden], etc. But again, it is more of a judgment call on considering the above fairy-tales or stories whereas history has taken away that ambiguity regarding Cinderella, Snow White, and the Little Match Girl.

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hơn một năm qua fanfly said…
I think to be a fairy tale, it has to have a quality that makes people want to tell it over and over which usually means it possesses certain universal themes that everyone can relate to. ie: Cinderella is a downtrodden girl who surmounts oppression to become something special. Everyone wants to be a Cinderella. There are hundreds of versions of this story throughout folklore and popular culture. The same with Beauty and the Beast. Hell, Pride and Prejudice can be seen as a version of Beauty and the Beast.
The other thing is that fairy tales tend to be morality tales. They have a moral, there's a purpose to the story, something to be taught.
Perhaps stories such as A Little Princess, Oliver Twist, etc. can achieve fairy tale status by their universal themes, by the morals they teach, by the way that other stories imitate them, but are they in turn imitating the fairy tales that came before?
In truth, every tale has been told. There is no such thing as a completely original story.
last edited hơn một năm qua
hơn một năm qua meyersonj said…
smile
Our book, AFTER THE GLASS SLIPPER, continues the Cinderella story in Cinderella language. It has been called, "Sheer genius" by Diane Sollee, Director of Smart Marriages, "enchanting," by Rabbi Harold White, of Georgetown University, and "A wise and witty book," by Steve Roberts, co-author of NY Times bestseller.
So this is a current fairy tale, available from bookstores & Amazon.com