This item is restricted to the Union College Campus. If you have questions or need access, please contact us at: digitalarchive@union.edu.
Please login if you are a member of the Union College community.
Detailed Description
This thesis explores the reflective relationships that inspire transformation in the fairy tale Beauty and the Beast. Critics tend to reify the fairy tale, its characters, and its evolution, maintaining that the fairy tale is formulaic and its characters archetypal. These arguments suggest that the fairy tale only imitates what has come before and deny the fairy tale the possibility of dynamic meaning. I argue instead that Beauty and the Beast is a magic mirror that reflects its reader?s psyche, resulting both in the tale?s changing meaning and a transformed reader. The reflective relationship between Beauty and Beast, which enables physical transformation and emotional growth, emblematizes this reader-tale bond. My analysis of the myth of Cupid and Psyche, the French tales of Mmes de Beaumont and de Villeneuve, the Brothers Grimm folklore, and Disney?s animated film describes how and why these variants change. New variants are products of the past tales, contemporary problems, and the reader?s perception. The reflective relationship between Beauty and Beast extends to the symbiotic exchange between the reader and the tale, the author and his creation, and the society and its critique. By understanding these relationships, we embrace this tale?s meaning as dynamic instead of dated.
Union College Schaffer Library Digital Projects
Union College Schaffer Library Special Collections, 807 Union St., Schenectady, NY 12308; 518-388-6620; https://www.union.edu/schaffer-library
English