So, yeah.
I'm going to be taking a little bit of a break from Fairy Tale Fandom. Not sure how long. A few months maybe.
Lately, I've been getting a bit burned out on fairy tale related material. The thing is that I had been immersing myself in it for so long and seeing the same stuff depicted for so long that it started to feel like a bit too much of a chore. In the process both my goal of posting something every calendar week as well as my storytelling hobby ended up being harder to keep up with.
While that was going on, I found myself having much more to say about other things I'm a fan of. In the past few months I've had thoughts about comics, movies, TV and gaming that I've wanted to express and really no place to express them except my personal Facebook page. So, I launched a second blog entitled Universes Beckon. I mean, I suppose I could have written about that stuff on Fairy Tale Fandom but I would have had to tie it all back in to fairy tales and folklore, which wouldn't have been hard but also wouldn't necessarily have lined up with the points I wanted to make.
So, that's the deal. No more Fairy Tale Fandom for a little while but I will continue to be posting on Universes Beckon. I may pop in again to post a special Halloween post or something, but that's it. I'm hoping to come back with a fresh perspective and maybe a new approach. Right now, I'm having a lot of fun reading things that are not fairy tale retellings or folk tale collections for the first time in a couple of years.
So I'll see you again soon, just not too soon.
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Fairy Tale Fandom Book Report: The Sorcerer's Apprentice.
Okay, so this one might be more confession than review, but stick with me.
First, there are some things you should know about me and if
you’ve been following me on this blog or on Twitter, you’ve probably had some
inkling of for a while. First of all, I
am not a professional critic. Second,
I’m also not really a “fairy tale scholar”.
When people have called me such online, I’ve generally rejected it and
replied that I’m “just a fan”. This is
for a variety of reasons. Lastly, I’m
not particularly fond of reading the works of people who are considered fairy
tale scholars. I’m really more of a
fiction reader. Also, when I have tried
to read the works of scholars, I felt like they were trying to tell me what to
think about a story when I’d rather read the story myself and come to my own
conclusions. I’ve tried, but I’ve never
really enjoyed reading them. Really, I’m
just a guy with a library school degree, a pastime telling stories, a lot of
opinions and a platform on which to express them. Just thought you should keep these things in
mind as you read forward.
So, a few months ago, I get contacted by a PR person at
Princeton University Press asking me if I want to read and review the new book
by Jack Zipes: The Sorcerer’s
Apprentice. Now, at first glance
this book doesn’t seem like the kind of thing that I would go for. For one, it’s by Jack Zipes. I’ve already said I don’t care much for
reading scholarly works. But also
because Zipes has become the face of the scholarly, anti-Hollywood view of
fairy tales. If you have “OMG! Disney!” on one side, then you have Zipes on
the other. And though I haven’t brought
it up much, I have just as much of an issue with the anti-Disney contingent as
I do with the Mouse itself. Mainly in the sense
that Hollywood is what’s been keeping many of these tales alive and that
whether we like it or not, a Hollywood movie getting adapted from a story is
often a mark of a story or property gaining legitimacy in our current culture. The other issue is that it was a collection
based around stories of a certain tale type, and I usually don’t read
those. Most of the collections I read
are regional (Japanese Tales, Folk Tales
of the British Isles, Latin American Folktales, etc).
But still, this was Princeton University Press! Most of the people who actually ask me to
review books for them are either small publishers or people who
self-publish. Some stuff, like the stuff
made by World Weaver Press, isn’t bad. But
so much other stuff is. I’ve read so
many stories where people think “fairy tale” just means throwing any fantasy
concept in there or that it’s an excuse to write stories about cotillions and
petticoats. But Princeton University
Press felt like something major and serious.
It felt like I had hit the big time.
So, I agreed to it. Should I
have? I’m not sure.
The book starts off with a piece by Zipes. He lays out that the “Sorcerer’s Apprentice”
concept is split into two different concepts.
There’s the “Humiliated Apprentice” as immortalized in Goethe’s poem,
Paul Dukas’s music and a certain Fantasia short. The other is the “Rebellious Apprentice” in
which a boy goes to learn from a sorcerer and rebels against him leading to a
situation in which the sorcerer and his apprentice chase each other while
changing forms (note: I have encountered this type of story before in the form
of a Yiddish folk tale and have even told it.
Though, I can’t say I love the tale).
The overarching idea that Zipes brings up is that the stories represent
a “master/slave dialectic”. The idea
being that apprentice work was pretty much equivalent to slavery centuries
ago. To Zipes, the “Humiliated
Apprentice” story represents a type of story meant to keep slaves down and
depict rebelling against slavery as bad.
The “Rebellious Apprentice” stories represent stories of a clever slave
rebelling against his master and gaining a higher position. To be honest though, I’m not sure how much I
buy all that. For one thing, it just
seems much more likely and reasonable to me that the “Humiliated Apprentice” is
more likely a story warning against hubris.
The apprentice isn’t a slave rebelling against his master. He’s a little kid who thinks he can drive a
car because he saw his dad do it and proceeds to get into a car wreck. As for the “Rebellious Apprentice” stories,
while it makes a little more sense for it to be a master/slave thing, I just
kind of wonder why so many of these stories bother with the apprenticeship
stuff at all. A good number of these
stories involve the character studying the sorcerer’s books while he’s not
around. Why not just make it a slave who
studies the books and then rebels using magic?
This makes me think that maybe the tutelage aspect is a lot more
important than Zipes is giving it credit for.
Zipes talks about some other things.
He touches on the subject of childism, which is prejudice against
children. He gets in a couple digs at
Disney, as he usually does. He even
talks about the Harry Potter franchise and I’ll be honest, I’m not sure whether
he likes it or not. He seems impressed
at some points, but calls it banal at another.
If anyone else has read this book and gets what he was going for, more
power to you. But now this brings us to
the tales themselves.
The book is separated into two parts, “Humiliated Apprentice
Tales” and “Rebellious Apprentice Tales”.
From there, each part is separated into sections by time period: “Early
Tales”, “19th Century Tales”, “20th Century Tales” and
the like. It’s pretty much what you’d
expect. All the tales fit the archetype
the book is focused on. I’m going to be
honest with you, though. I started to
lose interest in the stories after a while.
Though there were differences between them, I started to feel like I was
still just reading the same story over and over and over again. Some did deviate a fair bit and those were a
pleasant surprise. For example, there’s
an E. Nesbit story in there that I really like (I should really read more of
her stuff). Such tales are few and far
between, though. I should note that I
was also getting burnt out on fairy tales at the time too, so that could be it.
I didn’t even finish the book yet. If you look at the picture below, you’ll see
I got very close to the end but didn’t quite finish and it took me a good long
while too. I’m posting this now because
I was afraid it would take me a whole year to get through that last little bit.
But here’s the thing with this book and I want everyone to
pay extra attention to this next paragraph before getting angry at me in the
comments.
From as objective a standpoint as I can manage, there is
nothing wrong with this book. It is not
a bad book. It does not have any serious
problems or red flags. All the chosen
stories are appropriate to the topic of the book. Jack Zipes’s analysis is pretty much what
you’d expect from Jack Zipes. It’s
organized well. The thing is that it’s
just not the kind of book I like. That
doesn’t make it bad. We all have tastes
and we all have opinions. If you like
Jack Zipes and you like anthologies that focus on one specific tale type, you
will probably like this book.
And now that that’s out there, I’m not sure when I’ll post
again. I’m thinking about taking a
hiatus from Fairy Tale Fandom (though, I’ll still post occasionally on my other
blog Universes Beckon). I’m still a bit
burned out on fairy tales. Also, I think
I’ve hit a bit of a wall in terms of what to do with this blog. So, I've got some things to think about.
Later.
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