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Publicado por Indiana University Press, Bloomington ; London, 1976
ISBN 10: 0253202035ISBN 13: 9780253202031
Librería: SPHINX LIBRARY, CHONBURI, Tailandia
Libro
Soft cover. Condición: Very Good. Revised Edition. Book Condition: Very Good with slight tropical speckling to Page Edges, otherwise, clean, clear text in tightly bound volume. No internal inscriptions, markings or stains. This translation originally published: New York : F. Ungar, 1970. - Translation of: 'Es war einmal'. 3., durchgesehene Aufl. Gottingen : Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht, 1968. Includes index. Dimensions: 5.4 x 0.5 x 8.2 inches. Weight: 8 ounces. Why do fairytales continue to fascinate? Why do we think of Red Riding Hood when we find ourselves alone in the woods or even a city park? Why does Hollywood still reap profit from retelling the old stories? Why do they move us so deeply? On the Nature of Fairy Tales by Max Luthi (1909-1991) is a wonderful place to begin to look under the surface of these deceptively simple tales. The eleven essays gathered in this book explore different features of fairytales such as structure, symbolism, and meaning. Luthi views the tales as a unique literary genre. He knew and referred to the major schools of folklore research ¿ the sociological, the psychological, and the comparative historical approaches ¿ but he always returned to the stories themselves. The meanings he found there were more than enough. Fairytales have ¿a crispness and precision¿ in part, according to Luthi, because they eliminate most descriptions. We hear of a dark forest, a cottage, a witch, but any and all details come from our own imagination. In a similar way, there is no real character development. ¿The fairy tale is not concerned with individual destinies,¿ but this lends the tales a universal meaning. The prince or princess stands for all of us, ¿as an image of the human spirit.¿ At its core, the fairytale is about our ¿deliverance from an unauthentic existence and [the] commencement of a true one.¿ Prince or princess, goose girl or goatherd, all have lost their way. Their radiance, which is our radiance, is hidden. The kitchen lad wears a hat to hide his golden hair. Sometimes the hero or heroine sets off into the forest alone. Sometimes they sit and weep. ¿Crying, the sign of helplessness, summons assistance ¿ again a feature recurring in innumerable fairy tales. Precisely as an outcast can man hope to find help.¿ The caveat is that one must be kind and compassionate to all living creatures in order to find the right kind of help at the right time. Even ants will repay a kindness that can save the hero¿s life. Luthi quotes Mircea Eliade who said that fairytale listeners experience an ¿initiation in the sphere of imagination.¿ In Luthi¿s view, fairytales echo the truths of the great spiritual traditions ¿ both we and the world are far more than what we seem: "The fairy tale conquers time by ignoring it. Part of the power which it has to delight the reader derives from this triumph over time and the passage of time¿.[these stories] remove us from the time continuum and make us feel that there is another way of viewing and experiencing life, that behind all birth and death there is another world, resplendent, imperishable, and incorruptible.".
Publicado por Metzler, 2004
ISBN 10: 3476200167ISBN 13: 9783476200167
Librería: Bookbot, Berlin, Alemania
Libro
Condición: Fair. Beschriftungen. Deutsch.