The better to eat you with: the anthropophagy plots of fairy tales

Silvia Storti

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This chapter examines a couple of examples of cannibalism in fairy tales and their adaptations, highlighting the links between past and present portrayals of anthropophagical plots and characters. Dorothy Thelander postulates that cannibalism may have been excised from oral tales in order to make less odious the identification with the rich landlords it might have represented, but it is indubitable that the fabrication of the ogre race allowed anthropophagy to persist in fairy-tale narratives. Charles Perrault penned his Sleeping Beauty along with other tales at the end of the 17th century, putting his secondary villain in line with Thelander‘s analysis. Perrault‘s 'les inclinations des Ogres‘ is translated as the 'inclinations of an ogress‘, which seems to imply a more human queen mother than the French text; even Carter, in her own version, gives it as 'the queen still had ogrish instincts‘.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationInterdisciplinary essays on cannibalism
Subtitle of host publicationbites here and there
EditorsGiulia Champion
Place of PublicationNew York, U.S.
PublisherRoutledge
Pages176-189
ISBN (Print)9780367432607
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

Publication series

NameWarwick series in the Humanities
PublisherRoutledge

Keywords

  • English language and literature

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