What a brief folktales that you know
Answers
Folktales (or Fairy Tales)
Folktales are stories that grew out of the lives and imaginations of the people, or folk. They have always been children’s favorite type of folk literature.
Their popularity springs from their imaginative characters, their supernatural elements, their focus on action, their simple sense of justice, their happy endings, and the fundamental wisdom they contain.
Many people use the terms folktale and fairy tale interchangeable, though few of these tales actually contain fairies. “Fairy tales are unreal but they are not untrue; they reflect essential developments and conditions of man’s existence” (cited in Lüthi, 1976, Once Upon a Time: On the Nature of Fairy Tales, p. 70)
Important folktale collections:
Charles Perrault’s “Tales of Mother Goose” (1697) collected and published in France: first written version of folktales.
Wilhelm and Jakob Grimm’s “Nursery and Household Tales” (1812) collected and published in Germany: helped to popularize folktales (also see Grimm’s tales at nationalgeographic.com and Animated Grimm Tales)
Joseph Jacobs’s “English Fairy Tales” (1894) collected and published in England: further helped to popularize folk literature
Andrew Lang’s “Fairy Books” (1889-1910) collected and published a series of fairy books containing folktales from around the world
Below are the most prevalent kinds of folktales (note that some folktales have characteristics of two or more folktale categories):
1. Animal tales are perhaps the oldest of all folktales. They are part myth, part fable, and part fairy tales. They play significant roles in early stories and legends. Talking animals appear in many European folktales. For example, “The Three Little Pigs” and “Little Red Riding Hood”.
2. Wonder tales (also known as fairy tales) are the best known of the traditional folktales. They are stories of supernatural wonders typically depicting the conflict between good and evil. Most conclude with the triumph of virtue and a happy marriage. In fairy tales, the supernatural wonder is derived from either a magical person (a fairy godmother, a wicked witch), a magical object (a wondrous beanstalk, a talking mirror, a magic lamp) or an enchantment (a miraculous sleep that lasts until love’s first kiss). For example, “Cinderella”, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”, “Sleeping Beauty” and “Jack and the Beanstalk”
3. Cumulative tales are the ones in which successive additions are made to a repetitive plot line. They are generally very simple in plot and brief, for with each addition, the entire sequence is repeated. For example, “The Gingerbread Man” and “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”.
4. Pourquoi tales (“pourquoi” means “why” in French) seeks to explain natural phenomena. They provide primitive explanations for the many “why” questions early humans asked. They are found throughout the world and especially popular in African and Native American folklore. There is a strong connection between pourquoi tales and myths; however, the setting in pourquoi tales is earthly and deities play no role in pourquoi tales as they do in myths. For example, “Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky” (from Southern Nigeria), “Where Stories Come From” (from Zulu), and “Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears” (1976) (see the video at Prairie School Television).
5. Noodlehead tales are light-hearted tales about silly people doing silly things. These tales are popular because of their pure nonsense and jocularity, and sometimes we enjoy the triumph of the good-hearted simpleton over the craftier evil characters of the story. For example, “Hans in Luck” by the Grimm brothers and “The Three Wishes” by Joseph Jacobs.