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fandomhigh2007-01-15 10:40 am
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Traditional Fairy Tales, Class Two
Monday, January 15, Period 2
The table in the center of the room was filled with breakfast pastries and hot drinks, there were stacks of books close at hand for the students to borrow for their readings assignments, and Aziraphale looked quite cheerful as he sat in his armchair and waited for the class to arrived.
"Good morning, everyone! I hope you all enjoyed your first week of classes. Today we'll begin our discussion of the basic character archetypes found in fairy tales. Your assigned reading was Jack the Giant Killer and Molly Whuppie. Following the lecture, we'll discuss the central characters in these two stories, and how they fit into the roles of hero and villain."
LECTURE: "With a few exceptions, every fairy tale contains two central figures: the hero or heroine, and the villain. These characters can take many forms, from innocent child to clever thief, from evil stepmother to hungry wolf, but the central conflict of a fairy tale often evolves around the idea of the hero outwitting the villain. The hero may have a quest to fulfill, a puzzle to solve, or a difficult situation to escape. They may act out of self-defense, altruism, love, or necessity -- sometimes even out of greed or fear. Heros display a common set of characteristics -- in general, they are quick-witted, creative, and bold. Villains are not always evil, but are in general selfish and greedy, and usually act out of a desire to fulfill personal needs or an often baseless dislike of the hero."
DISCUSSION: "Take a look at the two stories from your assigned reading. Identify the hero and villain in each one, and then explain what motivates their actions. In your opinion, why is the villain villainous, and why does the hero act heroically?
"I would also like you to take a little time at the end of class to meet with the members of your project groups. I'll be expecting proposals for your final project in a few weeks, and I'll try to give you time during each class to meet with one another."
ASSIGNMENT: "For next week, read Mr Fox and John the True."
[ooc: For those who are new to Aziraphale's classes, there is always a spread of breakfast pastries and hot drinks, which you are free to mod. Also, the room is always arranged with comfortable chairs and couches for seating, rather than desks.Please wait for the OCD threads are now up, and class is in session.]
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The table in the center of the room was filled with breakfast pastries and hot drinks, there were stacks of books close at hand for the students to borrow for their readings assignments, and Aziraphale looked quite cheerful as he sat in his armchair and waited for the class to arrived.
"Good morning, everyone! I hope you all enjoyed your first week of classes. Today we'll begin our discussion of the basic character archetypes found in fairy tales. Your assigned reading was Jack the Giant Killer and Molly Whuppie. Following the lecture, we'll discuss the central characters in these two stories, and how they fit into the roles of hero and villain."
LECTURE: "With a few exceptions, every fairy tale contains two central figures: the hero or heroine, and the villain. These characters can take many forms, from innocent child to clever thief, from evil stepmother to hungry wolf, but the central conflict of a fairy tale often evolves around the idea of the hero outwitting the villain. The hero may have a quest to fulfill, a puzzle to solve, or a difficult situation to escape. They may act out of self-defense, altruism, love, or necessity -- sometimes even out of greed or fear. Heros display a common set of characteristics -- in general, they are quick-witted, creative, and bold. Villains are not always evil, but are in general selfish and greedy, and usually act out of a desire to fulfill personal needs or an often baseless dislike of the hero."
DISCUSSION: "Take a look at the two stories from your assigned reading. Identify the hero and villain in each one, and then explain what motivates their actions. In your opinion, why is the villain villainous, and why does the hero act heroically?
"I would also like you to take a little time at the end of class to meet with the members of your project groups. I'll be expecting proposals for your final project in a few weeks, and I'll try to give you time during each class to meet with one another."
ASSIGNMENT: "For next week, read Mr Fox and John the True."
[ooc: For those who are new to Aziraphale's classes, there is always a spread of breakfast pastries and hot drinks, which you are free to mod. Also, the room is always arranged with comfortable chairs and couches for seating, rather than desks.
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Class Roster
Project Groups
Linkdrop for classes

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Discussion
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Lana made a little face. "In both stories, the giants were the villains because that was their nature - they caused destruction and ate humans."
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He paused for a moment.
"In the second story, I almost instantly want to say the parents are the villains as well as the giants. The parents left their children in the wood to fend for themselves and indirectly pushed them into the dangers with the giants. Molly Whuppie was the hero due to being clever, intelligent and brave. Though, later in the story, the king seems to take advantage of that by sending her back to the giants." He frowned. "It's really quite troubling to read that."
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"And the giant's wife wasn't much better, letting him get away with all those atrocities," she added. "And if you want to get right down to it, Molly's sisters weren't much help either."
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“It’s a little hard to say, Sir. I mean obviously from what we’ve learned in class, Jack is the hero in the first story and Molly the hero in the second. They both fit the ‘heroic myth’ and go on the ‘heroic’ journey. They come from humble beginnings, they are challenged from the onset with a task that they take on themselves for the betterment of others and they complete these seemingly insurmountable tasks through original thinking. Which seems a bit strange since as I recall from history, monarchies didn’t encourage original thinking but I guess if it made a good story… anyway.”
Taking a breath, Neil continued.
“But there is one small flaw in my ability to see either of them as pure hero in that they both receive monetary and social status gain from their endeavors. Molly in particularly, okay the first time she’s saving her life and the lives of her sisters but after that she’s just going after the giant’s stuff to get rewards from the king. Speaking of the giants, it’s obvious in both stories that they are to be the villains, mostly due to the grotesque language used to describe them and the horrific extremes of their actions but again, taking Molly in particular, once she and her sisters had escaped, what was heroic about her return to the giant’s lair to take his stuff? Were people in danger? Now in Jack’s story, the giants were out there bringing the horror to peaceful folks but Molly’s giant only get nasty when people were on his territory. So I guess I have a hard time seeing either Jack or Molly as completely heroic….err…even though, I guess that’s what the lecture was supposed to be about.”
Neil blushed a little and moved to sit down.
“Sorry, Sir.”
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"Much as I like the guy, Jack wasn't a hero - he was a trickster and a conman, motivated by self-interest. He did things that ended up being considered heroic, but he wasn't trying. I mean, look at it. Most of the giants he killed for money, or to save his own skin, and while he did give the fair ladies a chance to escape, all he did was give them the keys. He didn't actually help them. You know he hooked up with the prince because anyone that stupidly generous was bound to pay off in the end. And he did. Once he was a knight, he had to keep killing giants - it was what they'd come to expect of him, and I also think there was a big dash of wanting adventure. It was only at the very end that he acted out of a desire to protect someone, when he promised the old man he'd risk his life to save the Duke's daughter, maybe because there wasn't anyone but him who could. His heroism was mostly incidental, an added bonus," here Jack grinned, "but he was very, very good, and you have to give him points for that."
He paused before going on to the second. "Molly was clever and quick and she did what she had to do to keep her sisters safe. Nothing else was more important than that. Everything she did was to protect them, and I think that does makes her a hero. The king was the real villain, because he used Molly, trading on her love for her sisters to steal things he was too cowardly to get for himself."
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He fiddled with his pencil. "It is a short story, though. Makes me wonder what would've happened to him afterward . . . sometimes people who are only in it for themselves can change, you know?"
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Talk Amongst Yourselves
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