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Cinderella Essay

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Cinderella

I think most everyone knows the story of Cinderella, made famous by Walt Disney after making its big debut on screen in 1950; the movie was so popular that it was again released five times within a thirty-seven year span. In 1970, Anne Sexton wrote her own version of Cinderella. In this work of art, she speaks of how a `Cinderella' lives in every day life, whether it is the plumber who wins the lottery, or the milkman turned real estate agent. She then proceeds to tell her version of the Cinderella story, a little morbid, but after reading her biography, quite understandable.

Anne Sexton was a model until 1953 when she gave birth to a daughter and began to suffer from postpartum depression. She experienced numerous …show more content…

With a wave of her sparkly wand, and the words "Bibbidi Boppiti Boo", she turned a pumpkin into a miraculous coach and buggy and Cinderella's poor, rag-like clothes into a beautiful gown. All of this sounds wonderful, sure, but where's the catch? Cinderella had to be home before the strike of midnight, or her spell would expire and her true identity would be exposed to everyone at the Ball. Once she was at the Ball, her eyes met Prince Charming and it was love at first sight. They danced the night away, engulfed in each other arms, both of them loving every minute of it. The time slipped away and as she heard the clock stroke midnight, she ran out, accidentally leaving her glass slipper on the steps of the Ballroom. The Prince was determined to find his Princess, so he kept her slipper in hopes that she would return for it. Every woman in the town tried to fit her foot into that slipper, but "the perfect fit proved that Cinderella was indeed the young woman who had won the Prince's heart" (Heller 16).

The version of Cinderella that Anne Sexton gives is much different than the fairy tale we all know and love. The underlying meaning of Sexton's version gives the same plot as the fairy tale, but the word choice that she uses is much more modern, and un-pleasant. Like the Disney fairy tale, Cinderella, she goes to live with two pretty daughters, but "with hearts like blackjacks" (Kirszner, 854). Cinderella was

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