
Why Are The Same Fairytales Retold Again And Again?

The Cyclical Magic Of Fairytales
“Repetition is its own kind of magic,” author Alix E. Harrow explains. Like a spell, once a fairytale catches the popular imagination, it ignites. “Trying to trace the beginning of my love of fairytales is like trying to lick my own elbow or find the end of a circle. I’ve been breathing fairy tales since before I could read…These are my foundational myths. Of course I keep coming back to them—how could I ever escape them?” Harrow retells one of these foundational stories—”Sleeping Beauty”—in the first book of her fractured fairytale novella series slated for release in 2021, which she describes as the Spider-Verse, but fairytales. (Her feminist witch book The Once and Future Witches releases this October.) Young adult author Melissa Bashardoust has more to say on this repetitious nature of storytelling:“I think part of this is cyclical—we’re often drawn to retell stories we’re familiar with or that impacted us when we were younger, and so those are the stories that another generation becomes familiar with, and so on. But also, the stories we retell are often the ones that we believe still have relevance for modern audiences. The fairytales that are retold are the ones that can transform over time because they speak to universal fears (such as how Bluebeard morphed into the gothic novel at one point, and has now morphed into domestic suspense) or hopes (as with the many, many variations of Cinderella to be found in romantic comedies over the years).”
Bashardoust’s first novel, Girls Made of Snow and Glass, retells “Snow White.” Though frequently retold, she transforms the tale through a feminist and lesbian lens to create a truly beautiful and original narrative that still has the ring of magic from the original. Her upcoming fairytale novel releasing in July—Girl, Serpent, Thorn—retells a less familiar tale from the Persian Shahnameh. Writer Jennifer Donnelly explains one reason why these tales caught the popular imagination in the first place:“I think it’s because those particular tales show heroines, with the decks stacked very much against them, triumphing over adversity. They give us hope…Most of us are not living our lives at the mercy of a wicked stepmother or an evil queen who has ordered her huntsman to cut out our hearts, but we still know what it’s like to be the victim of a mean girl or a queen bee, or to be treated badly by some other authority figure. Cinderella is powerless and living in very bad circumstances, yet she persists and gets what she wants without ever compromising her deep, essential goodness. The message that fairytale gives us—that kindness truly can win—is incredibly powerful and inspiring.”
In Donnelly’s retellings, she often takes a popular fairytale and subverts it by retelling the narrative from a different character’s perspective, such as in Stepsister, her feminist and empowering retelling of “Cinderella.” Author Ashley Poston agrees with Bashardoust, Harrow, and Donnelly, saying “I think they’re retold again and again because there’s something intrinsically familiar about them, and we—as humans—always tend to gravitate toward the familiar.” Her most recent book in the Once Upon a Con series, Bookish and the Beast, retells the ever-popular Beauty and the Beast.White Colonialism And The Media’s Influence
But there’s a problem with gravitating toward familiar fairytales, as Poston points out:“[W]hile I love de Beaumont’s Beauty and the Beast, there are many other cultures that have similar narratives that are lesser-known, and I often wish more of those were published—[Greece]’s ‘Cupid and Psyche,’ the Norwegian ‘East of the Sun West of the Moon,’ the Turkish ‘The Princess and the Pig,’ the southern African ‘The Snake with Five Heads,’ the Chinese folktale ‘The Fairy Serpent’—just to name a few. And it’s easy why I don’t think they’re more well-known: it’s because the majority of them aren’t from white storytellers.”
Patriarchal white colonialism has narrowed the field of popular fairytales to those from a few classic fairytale authors—Charles Perrault, Wilhelm and Jacob Grimm, and Hans Christian Andersen. And then Western white media winnowed the selection down even further by selecting tales from each of these authors that represented their values (especially Walt Disney). As author Kat Cho argues, “I do think that western fairytales are more widely disseminated because western culture is dominant in media and entertainment…I wish more folktales from non-western countries were more popular.” Kat Cho’s debut novel Wicked Fox uses the gumiho (nine-tailed fox) from Korean folklore as its premise. The very familiarity of fairytales that makes them so magical is also problematic in that it stems partly from a racist, patriarchal media. And even within the most popular ten fairytales, white versions are usually the ones that are retold. “For example, did you know one of the oldest versions of “Cinderella” we know of actually comes from China?” Shveta Thakrar, the author of the upcoming Star Daughter, asked. She’s referring to the fairytale “Yeh-hsien” (or “Ye Xian”) which was first published in 850 CE, and most likely dates back even further. But the version most commonly recognized comes from Charles Perrault (Disney based his film Cinderella on Perrault’s version) or from the Grimm Brothers (like from Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods). This isn’t to say that authors who retell these popular fairytales are racist, not at all. Many authors retell these stories in subversive, feminist, anti-racist ways. But the popularity of this handful of fairytales all from white Western cultures serves to gate-keep writers of color from retelling the stories from their own cultures. “I’ll admit” Thakrar told me, “it’s a little harder to do a retelling when your audience isn’t familiar with the source material; they don’t know what bits and themes you’re changing. But ultimately, your story or book has to stand on its own, anyway, so I hope hearing that doesn’t stop anyone. Write it!”Three Fairytale Retellings From Outside Western Culture
I’d specifically like to look at the most recent novels by Shveta Thakrar, Kat Cho, and Melissa Bashardoust and how they went about retelling fairytales and myths from their non-Western cultures for a broad audience of readers.

