The first time—okay, the first several times—I read most
fairy tales, I was aware, probably, of the concept of sex, but it wasn’t
something that I thought about at all. So it took me a few—okay, several—years
to figure out how many of my favorite characters were going at it like bunnies.
They embraced. He came into her room and lay down in her
bed. Will you marry me? Will you marry me? Will you marry me? Newsflash, guys:
fairy tales are all about sex and death, sometimes at the same time (See: Snow
White).
Forget Disney. Honey, she banged that boy. It’s right there
in the text.
It’s astounding. All of the things my parents tried to
protect me from, and there I was holed up in my bedroom with a book of fairy
tales, reading about bestiality and necrophilia. And none of us had any idea.
My parents assumed that fairy tales were safe. I was barely aware of sex on a
conceptual level until high school, and I didn’t have much actual comprehension
of the idea until well into college.
And now, well. I feel like someone as sheltered as me should
not have this high an awareness of the sexual undertones of classic children’s
stories, but here we are. None of your favorite princesses are exactly
unicorn-luring material. I’m not actually going to call them sluts in the text
here; that seems unkind. It was just an attention-grabber.
But you need to understand that these stories do not exist
in a vacuum. There are hundreds of years of history behind them, and you need
to be aware of the cultural implications. This stuff didn’t start out the way
we tell it now. Basile’s princesses didn’t wait until marriage. Perrault’s
princesses may have, sometimes, but the dude’s a whole big mess with his
pretentious self-righteous Moral-at-the-End-of-the-Story, and his local contemporaries
(more on them later) sure didn’t make their girls wait. Asbjornsen and Moe were
not about the abstinence, and neither were the Grimms.
In fact, I have here, for your viewing pleasure, a list of
stories in which the heroes and heroines didn’t bother with an “I do.”
1. East of the Sun, West of the Moon
·
Every night in the dark, guys.
2. Beauty and the Beast
·
Fun fact: “Will you marry me?” is a
mistranslation. It’s actually “Will you sleep with me?” Beauty said yes, and
the spell got broke once the deed was done, so, you know. Not even in human form when they got down and
dirty.
3. Prince Lindworm
·
This comes after she tortures him mercilessly,
and before he turns from a tortured snake monster into a handsome prince. Can
we all say “yuck”?
4. The Twelve Dancing Princesses
·
Come on, you know “danced through their shoes
each night” has gotta be a euphemism.
5. The Frog Prince
·
All he wanted was to lie in bed with her, and
she threw him against a wall! So let’s count this as a technicality, because it
totally would have happened if she wasn’t the only princess in the history of
ever to find bestiality squicky.
And on our This Is Concerning List:
1. Sleeping Beauty
·
rape
2. Snow White
·
necrophilia
3. Rapunzel
·
Seriously questionable consent
There isn't actually a whole lot of point here. Um. Avoid
stereotyping, I guess?
Oh! Hey. Got it.
Look, I love these girls. But any day now, we can totally
stop holding them as cartoony paragons of virtue. Honesty is the best policy,
after all, and I think it could do some good things regarding the upcoming
topic of folklore and feminism.
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