RUINING YOUR CHILDHOOD IN 3, 2, 1… The original stories behind the tales we know

Once upon a time, the marvelous and beautiful children tales that have filled our imagination with fantastic and charming stories and characters when we were little (Cinderella, Pinochio or Snow White…) were full of violence, darkness, misfortune, cruelty and evilness.

Those horrific stories were originally passed on orally from generation to generation until some writers, such as Perrault, Brothers Grimm or Walt Disney decided to convert the tales into books and films, making some changes until the stories evolved to the current happy tales we all know.

This is what we were learning during the last week’s medium group session, when we read two versions of Cinderella, Perrault’s and Grimm Brothers’, and compared them with the one we have watched in the Disney film. I was really impressed about the evolution of the story and the big differences among the versions; and, as I really liked discovering this, I would like to share with you the real cruel stories of some beautiful tales that we all know (I wish I do not ruin your childhood… :P).

Firstly, we can start with the innocent Little Red Riding Hood. In our version, she disobeys the advice of her mother in her way to visit her grandmother and walks slowly and entertains through the dangerous forest. Then, as the wolf is faster, he arrives earlier to grandmother’s house. He eats her, dresses up with grandma’s clothes, waits for the girl and eats her too. But a hunter discovers what happened and takes a knife to open the wolf’s abdomen; so, Caperucita and her grandmother go out of the wolf, they fill his abdomen with stones and finally the thirsty wolf goes to drink water to a lake, falls down and sinks because of his weight. However, the original version is more sadistic, as the wolf makes Little Red Riding Hood drink her grandmother’s blood before carving up and eating her. (You can find the different versions of Little Red Riding Hood here).

Goldilocks and the Three Bears is one of the most changed stories. We think that Goldilocks is a curious little girl who discovers the three bears’ house and touches some furniture and eat some soup before she sleeps in one of their beds. When the bears come, they get angry because someone has been in their house, but when they find Goldilocks in the bed, she is faster that the bears and escapes through the window before they kill or eat her; or, in other more recent versions, the bears behave well and even help her. Contrary to that, in the original version, Goldilocks was an old and hungry woman that was tortured by the bears and impaled in the spire of the bell tower. (You can find other versions of Goldilocks and The Three Bears here and here).

In case of The Lion King, the king is killed by his jealous brother and his son wants revenge. Although Rosencrantz (Timon) and Guildenstem (Pumba) try to distract him, he finally kills the jealous brother. And actually, in some versions, everyone dies.

Finally, I would like to share with you some interesting links where you can find more information about this topic: all versions of one tale, the history of the evolution of some stories; the reasons why each version was like it was depending on the social, economic, political and cultural circumstances, etc.:

2 thoughts on “RUINING YOUR CHILDHOOD IN 3, 2, 1… The original stories behind the tales we know

  1. Hi Rocío, first of all I would like to say that I really enjoyed your post. I was quite shocked when I realized that that the Cinderella’s version I know was actually a very soft mix between the Brother Grimm’s version and the Perrault’s one.

    In my version there was a godmother who converted a pumpkin into a chariot which is a part of Perrault’s Cinderella but also in my story there were birds that helped Cinderella with the dresses from Grimm’s story, in the story I knew it was also only one night of party and when the prince was looking for Cinderella there wasn’t a scene of cutting and fingers or a piece of heel, instead of that (thanks God) it was the soft scene with trying fit too big feet into the shoe which was made of glass. As you can see it was a total blend of lots of versions and for sure I could find more differences in my story.

    As a conclusion I consider that those stories are made for children so in my opinion they should be prepared with a lack of violence, pain or blood, or at least a minimum content of those.

  2. Pingback: The different character motifs we may find in every Fairy Tale | Exploring children's literature in english

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