potentialed: pls dnt (Default)

[personal profile] potentialed 2017-09-29 12:46 am (UTC)(link)
No, but it was a fairytale so logic and physics tend to go out the door.

The witch? Because she couldn't have one of her own. That's part of why she kept Rapunzel in the tower all her life. So she could have the child's love and attention all for herself.
potentialed: pls dnt (Default)

[personal profile] potentialed 2017-09-29 12:58 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yeah. In fairytales, books, movies. It's used as a plot device pretty consistently.

Tho fairytales themselves were supposed to be tales of caution due to children or women being in peril most of the time.

Beauty and the Beast has Belle sacrificing her freedom to save her father's life.
Hansel and Gretel are about two kids that are forced out into the woods and end up imprisoned by a witch that wants to eat them.
Cinderella is about a girl forced into cruel servitude by her stepmother after her father dies.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarves has a young princess fleeing into the woods for her life when her stepmother tries to have her huntsman cut the girl's heart out.
The Little Mermaid has a young woman doomed to die if she doesn't gain a prince's love in a certain number of days after cutting out her tongue to gain legs.
Little Red Riding Hood has a wolf trying to get a little girl into bed with him so he can eat her.

The list goes on tbh.
potentialed: pls dnt (Default)

[personal profile] potentialed 2017-09-29 01:07 am (UTC)(link)
[ Both works pretty well. ]

More of the latter, usually. Most scholars seem to agree on that much with how the telling of the stories tended to change over time. They were a lot darker and more graphic in their inception.

Like with Sleeping Beauty. Princess is cursed to fall into a deep sleep for all eternity and her prince impregnates her while she's asleep and it's no kiss that wakes her up but her child biting her nipple too hard while breastfeeding it.


[ Don't get him started on what Little Red Riding Hood actually means. ]