The “From Grimm to Disney” class
has taught me a lot and given me a better feel for what it’s like to be in
college. In this class, I have learned about typical symbols and characteristics
seen in fairytales by the Brothers Grimm, background knowledge of the Brothers
Grimm, the similarities and differences between the Grimm fairytales and Disney
movies, and analyzed the fairytales with different lenses. Now when I watch
movies and read stories, I will be able to compare them to the fairytale
symbols and motifs and understand them on a deeper level. Also, I now have a
better understanding of what it’s like to write a college paper, what a typical
college class would be like, and how to work in groups on a college level. Before
college, the longest paper I had ever written was about three pages, but now I
am able to write papers up to ten pages. When writing papers, I am now able to find
and use resources much more easily. I have found that college classes are a lot
more different than classes in high school. There definitely isn’t as much hand
holding and grades given and the difficulty level is higher as well. In high
school, I didn’t get many opportunities to work in groups, and when I did, they
were usually small projects. I’ve found that working on big projects in groups
is a lot more difficult than I expected and I now know how to handle problems
when they arise. Lastly, I learned about how easy and beneficial it is to
communicate with my professors. They are a huge help and really go out of their
way to provide any necessary assistance that I need. This class has been a
crucial part of my college experience and has given me knowledge that I can now
use outside of the classroom.
The Little Mermaid
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Blog Entry 10
This
cartoon about Rapunzel meeting her prince is a much more realistic point of
view than both the story by the Brothers Grimm and the Disney movie. In the
movie and story, Rapunzel is easily able to lift the prince up with her hair,
while in the cartoon, Rapunzel mentions how it would physically be impossible
for the prince to climb up her hair. Although in the story, Rapunzel mentions how
the prince was more easily able to climb up her hair than the witch by saying that
the witch was much heavier than the prince. Also, all three versions are
different because in the cartoon, Rapunzel cuts off her own hair, in the movie,
the prince cuts off Rapunzel’s hair, and in the story, the witch cuts of
Rapunzel’s hair. Even though the comic doesn’t discuss it, it is presumed that
the prince and Rapunzel will never be able to get together and live happily
ever after since there is no way for the prince to get up to the tower and
rescue her. Both in the movie and the story, Rapunzel and the prince were able
to get married and live happily ever after. Though all three versions have the
same idea in mind, a girl with long hair waiting for her prince, the actual
events and the assumed outcomes that happen in the comic are completely
different than the events and outcomes in the movie and story.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Blog Entry 9
There are two stories, “The Robber
Bridegroom” and “Fitcher’s Bird” that are somewhat similar to the story “Bluebeard.”
Each story deals with a girl who has an arranged marriage with an unattractive
guy. Eventually curiosity got the best of the girl and she ventured into a
place where she would find death and destruction. In “Fitcher’s Bird” and “Bluebeard,”
this place was a room that their husbands had forbidden them to go in, but when
their husbands were away, they went in them anyway. In the rooms, they found
dead bodies and then were caught by their husbands and destined to die.
However, the girls were able to save their lives by buying themselves time.
Other than the basic plot, “The
Robber Bridegroom” is much different than the other two stories. In this story,
the girl never actually gets married to her arranged husband-to-be. She visits
his house where she hides in the basement and watches him and his friends kill
an innocent girl, where as in the other two stories, the girls never see women
being killed, they only see their dead bodies. In “Fitcher’s Bird,” when the
girl opened the door to the forbidden chamber with the key, she also had an egg
which she dropped. The egg was permanently stained with the blood from the
chambers floors and that’s how the arranged husband discovered she had betrayed
him. Similarly, the girl from “Bluebeard” had permanently stained the key.
These three stories are unique
because, unlike the stories we have been reading, there is no prince charming,
instead there are ugly old men that the girls are forced to be with at the beginning
of the story. In the end, the men try to kill the girls, but the girls are
cunning enough to save themselves and instead kill the men.
I liked “The Robber Bridegroom” the
most because at the end, the girl shows her whole family what a horrible person
the man is by telling the story of how she found out and even showing the
finger for proof. Since they were surrounded by her whole family, the man had
nowhere to run and was killed by her family members. She was very smart and
witty to wait all that time to expose the man of the kind of person he really
was.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Blog Entry 8
The two stories of The Frog King and Cupid and Psyche have many more differences than similarities. One of the few similarities between them are that the main girls in the stories are the most beautiful of all the three daughters from each family. Also, when the girls discover their destinies to marry ugly men, they were not looking to find companions, though the men that wanted to be with the two girls were desired their companionship. In both stories, the parents really push the relationship on the girls as well. In the end, the two girls discover that the men they thought they did not want to be with were actually attractive and the girls eventually fell in love with the men.
Most of the plots for each were different from each other. First of all, the Cupid story dealt with Greek Gods and Goddesses and the Frog story only dealt with a magical frog. Secondly, the girl’s family from the Cupid story thought the girl should kill her destined companion, while the girls family from the Frog story pushed her to stay in the relationship because she made a promise. Also in the Cupid story, the girl accepted her fate to marry someone who is ugly, but in the Frog story, the girl tried to avoid being with the frog as much as possible. The girl from the Cupid story believed that her destined companion was ugly because she was told by him to never look at his face, while the girl from the Frog story knew that he was ugly because he was in frog form when she met him.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Little Red Riding Hood Cartoon
The cartoon I chose is a social cartoon. I chose it because I thought it was funny how Little Red Riding Hood is portrayed as the bad guy and it relates the classic tale to what might occur in modern day events. The roles have now been reversed and the wolf is the innocent victim and Little Red Riding Hood is the evil villain. In this day and age, people assume others are suspicious when they wear things that can hide their face and they act like they have something to hide. Coincidentally, Red Riding Hood wore a red hood that might have partially covered her face and she carried a basket that might have had more than just cake and wine. If you think about it, it is does seem a little suspicious how a hooded girl was walking through a dark forest by herself.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Blog Entry 5
Both the Disney and Grimm versions of Snow White were similar in many ways. Each was about a beautiful young girl who was taken into the forest by a huntsman after he was told to do so by the evil queen. The evil queen had wanted her dead because the mirror said that Snow White was more beautiful than the evil queen. The huntsman felt so bad for Snow White that he let her run away into the forest where there she found the house where the seven dwarves lived. The seven dwarves came home after a day of work to find Snow White sleeping on their beds. When she awoke, the seven dwarves and Snow White made a deal that she could stay and live with them as long as she kept house for them. When the evil queen found out Snow White was still alive, she disguised herself as an old lady and came to give Snow White a poisonous apple. Snow White took a bite of the apple and fell down dead immediately. The dwarves put her in a glass coffin and one day a prince came to see snow white. She later awoke and the prince and her rode off on a horse to live happily ever after.
There are several differences though, and the reason Walt Disney decided to make them was probably because he wanted to make the story have more of a flow and make it sound more romantic. The first difference was that in the Disney version, Snow White met the prince at the beginning before the queen had sent her off to be killed, while in the Grimm version, she did not meet the prince until she was awoken later in the story. Another difference was that in the Grimm tale, the evil queen came to sell things to and kill Snow White twice before she came with the apple. In the Disney version, the evil queen only came that one time. Lastly, a huge difference between the two tales is that in the Disney version, Snow White was awoken from the poisonous apple spell by true loves kiss, but in the Grimm version, she was only awoken until the piece of apple was dislodged from her throat. These two tales were similar in many ways but there were also several main differences as well.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Blog Entry 4
The fairytale Cinderella, both the Disney version and the Grimm version, was about a girl named Cinderella who had become a servant for her stepmother and stepsisters. At one point there was a ball because the prince needed to find someone to marry, so when Cinderella’s stepfamily wouldn’t let her attend the ball, she magically transformed into a beautiful maiden and went to the ball. There, the prince decided that Cinderella was his soul mate though he wasn’t able to figure out her true identity until the slipper that Cinderella had left behind had been placed back on her foot. And there, Cinderella and the prince got married and lived happily ever after. But is this realistic? Could this actually happen in real life? Of course not! A poor servant girl would never be able to clean up as well as Cinderella that instantly. Even if somehow she miraculously would, it is doubtful that a rich man would stop in his tracks and say I’m going to marry you. I find it impossible for someone to go “from rags to riches” just by first impression. If anything, the only way someone could come into a lot of money so fast would be if they won the lottery. Some may point out the movie Pretty Woman about a stripper who fell in love with her client after only several days of knowing each other. I believe it is possible that that could happen, but it is a slim chance. I find it so unlikely that a poor woman would be able to fall in love with a rich man so fast. The fairytale Cinderella gives children false hope about their futures, making them think that no matter what, men will love them as long as they are pretty.
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