Russian 0090: Russian Fairy Tales
Questions for Rowe and Bottigheimer Readings
Karen Rowe: "The Female Voice in Folklore and Fairy Tales"
- What does it mean when Rowe writes that that the "fairy tale ... is
a female art" (p. 71)? What are the signs of this femaleness?
- As a "female art," what function does the fairy tale fulfill,
according to Rowe? What are the "two levels" (p. 57) on which a fairy
tale operates?
- Rowe uses the term "two-fold legacy" to describe the origin,
development, and distribution of fairy tales. What is this legacy and
what does it have to do with "appropriation"?
Ruth Bottigheimer: "Silenced Women in the Grimms' Tales: The
'Fit' Between Fairy Tales and Society in Their Historical
Context"
- What happened to the ancient German belief in "women's
inherent power over nature expressed through words" (p. 119) in
literary production, both folk and canonical, in nineteenth-century
Germany? What social values caused this?
- On what levels does silence appear in the Grimms' tales (p.
118-119, 125)? What is the difference between male and female
silence?
- What role does "appropriation," to use Rowe's term, play in the use
of indirect and direct speech in the Grimms' tales?
- According to Bottigheimer, what is the significance in the Grimms'
tales of the distribution of verbs that introduce a character's speech
("to say," "to ask," "to answer," "to cry")?
Developed by John Kachur.