cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/55206964

I just finished up a rewatch of Dimension 20’s Neverafter (highly recommended if you haven’t watched it) and as the various iconic story tellers were introduced, the question above came up in my mind.

To clarify, by fables/fairy tales I would mean widely known tales told primarily to children to pass on positive ideals and morals. Not just entertainment, but at least partially education as well. I also think it should be quite well known to count - it should at least be considered common knowledge in the region it’s from. As for “modern”, let’s say the last 100 years or so? Though anything post-Grimm may be interesting.

Personally, I’ve struggled trying to think of anything particularly satisfying. Dr. Seuss feels like it’s just about that iconic, though that’s pretty old itself at this point. Is there anything Internet based that my out-of-touch brain is overlooking?


*Further thoughts:

Thinking on it more, other comments have helped me realize that, at least for me, the crux of the issue is that for the last 100 years or so, pretty much all stories have been commercial endeavors. Perfected drafts copywritten by companies and “protected” from the grubby hands of society. Basically the antithesis of a folk-tale, which is passed on and told and retold, shifting and morphing each time.

Thankfully, in the last few decades the internet has made less centralized media a thing again. And, though not strictly kid-friendly, I unironically am thinking that internet memes are the contemporary form of folk-tales, or at least the closest thing we’ve got. And I don’t mean just “funny pictures”, but the actual definition of meme - “an idea, behavior, or style that spreads through imitation within a culture.” Perhaps that’s the progenitor of the next generation of “fairy tales”?

  • @hedgehogging_the_bed
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    39 hours ago

    I was reminded after watching Never After that the Brothers Grimm claimed to be working down old folk tales but they are also the only known version of many of the tales, so it can be assumed they made up at least a few of them.

    • EchOP
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      8 hours ago

      That’s ok. I think it more so matters what the tales become rather than what they start as.