Saturday, March 12, 2022

Fairy Tales, Anyone?


Jeff–Saturday

I thought it might be a good idea to come up with a light and cheery topic for this Saturday morning. 


Something to get my mind off the human catastrophe that Russia has unleashed upon the world in general, and the people of Ukraine in particular. I refrain from calling it Putin’s War not because I think he’s less than 100% responsible for his military’s blatant war crimes, but because it is the Russian people Putin is  indelibly staining with a mark his nation will carry before the world for generations.


Gleb Garanich/Reuters

All of which brought me around to thoughts of running off to Greece in search of Once Upon a Time adventures, and fairy tale endings. Voila, I had my topic. Greece and the Fairy Tale.
 

I expect that most who read Murder is Everywhere have at least a passing familiarity with ancient Greek myths.  Certainly Greeks think most of the world does, because a decade or so back they tied their national tourist campaign to the slogan, “Live your Myth in Greece.”  And it is hard to imagine an educated soul in the western world who hasn’t at least heard of Greece’s legends, if not the Iliad, certainly the Odyssey. 

 


So, what is a fairy tale anyway?  Their written origins go back thousands of years, and their oral roots thousands more.  Yet, it’s still hard to say what is precisely a fairy tale for as with so many other things in life there is serious academic debate over that seemingly simple question. To make things more complicated the actual name “fairy tale” didn’t exist until the late 17th Century and at one time much of Tolkien’s work and even Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz would have been considered fairy tales but today are called fantasy.  God bless progress.

 


As I see it, the stories we grew up with, the ones we always thought of as fairy tales, brought out gnomes, trolls, elves, dwarfs, giants, and that sort of creature, featured magic and sometimes—but far from always—an actual fairy.  Yes, fairies are no more required for fairy tales than reality is for propaganda. I digress. Back now to Greece’s seminal role in the fairy tale. 

 

Although the Egyptians generally are credited with reducing the first fairy tale to writing in 1300 B.C.E., it was Greece’s own Aesop who brought fame to the genre with his collection of fables in the 6th Century B.C.E.  And the oral tradition of such tales in Greece goes back thousands of years before then.  That’s not to say other cultures didn’t have similar rich oral traditions.  Indeed, it’s striking how so many different societies shared similar stories passing the same bit of wisdom or moral guidance across Europe, China, India, Egypt and elsewhere in Asia and Africa. 

 



Some say the similarities sprung from shared values.  Others claim they spread through tellers and listeners traveling and battling their way to far off places, but if so, for those tales to survive must they still not have rung true to each culture that absorbed them as its own?

 

So, what are examples of these similar tales?  I don’t want to sound Grimm (pained looks noted) but there are many.  For example, if you’re looking for something in the “Let’s rescue the maiden in the tower” vein, you can have the Greek champion shouting “Anthousa, Xanthousa, Chrisomalousa let down your hair,”—yes, that one young maiden had all those names—or go with the snappier “Rapunzel” of the Brothers Grimm version. 

 


Then there’s the one about how sometimes success in life is nothing more than a matter of “being in the right place at the right time.”  The Greeks call their version “Almondseed and Almondella,” but the Grimm Brothers’ went for “Doctor Know-all.”  Just in case neither title seems particularly fetching, doesn’t the Grimm Brother’s moniker at least make you wonder if their version didn’t tickle a homonymic chord in Ian Fleming’s search for a title for perhaps his 007’s most celebrated escapade?

 

And then there is the most famous fairy tale of all, or at least one of the top five.  Its recorded history goes back to the 1st Century B.C.E. as the story of the Greco-Egyptian girl, Rhodopolis.  Over ensuing centuries she moved around quite a bit until finally finding a home in Charles Perrault’s Mother Goose tales as Cinderella.

 


Which reminds me.  I’ve got to start rounding up the mice and get my pumpkin moving. It’s time to get working on my new book launch…coming April 5th… ONE LAST CHANCE, set on the Aegean island of Ikaria.

 


–Jeff


12 comments:

  1. I took my one last chance and pre-ordered it. As if I needed more books backed on my infinitely long reading queue. The things I do for my friends...

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  2. It's natural - but a pity - that all the events are in the evening ET. I'd love to join one but I'm not at my best at 2am...

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    1. Hard to imagine you not at your best, Michael, but the schedule is still in formation, so I'll see what I can do to perhaps get something set up more time zone appropriate for you.

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  3. As I thought, with fairy tales guiding our morality, we don't really need philosophers!
    Just a good book and good socks!

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    1. Yes, or to quote acclaimed folk philosopher Alfred E. Neuman, "Life socks."

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    2. Or in the great words of Richard Nixon:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6HIzYXZzI0

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  4. Once upon a time there was a young lad who grew up in Pittsburgh. He dreamed big dreams. He litigated; he mitigated; he cogitated; he wrote, and his dreams came true. And he and Barbara lived happily ever after. The End

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    1. Then there's the Pittsburgh area coal miner's son who's found new meaning in "Guys & Dolls" classic "Sue me, Sue me, what can you do me..." lyrics. The Beginning. :)

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  5. I'm probably missing something: are you, in fact, going to be at those locations for these virtual presentations or are the shops just organizing the zooms, or whatever?

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    1. Sorry about the confusion. I will be on site for an in person presentation at the Greater Pittsburgh Festival of Books, but for the others I will not be on site, but appear in a ZOOM-like format organized by the shops.

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