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Cinderella Research Paper

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The literary cauldron is J.R.R Tolkien’s metaphor for the combination of every story that has ever been created throughout time. Whenever an author writes a new story, they start by taking pieces of an old stories out of the cauldron. They add their own ideas or “spices” into the story and eventually, it is returned to the cauldron. Because of this, every story has aspects of other stories mixed. We call some of the most commonly used aspects “tropes”. Modern fairy tales are classic examples of tropes and how authors use the cauldron. In the 1950 film Cinderella, the tale follows an unloved girl called “Cinderella” ridiculed by her evil stepsisters and stepmother. They force her to be their maid. She is visited by her fairy godmother and is sent to the ball where she meets her true love, the prince. The directors of Cinderella; Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, and Hamilton Luske masterfully incorporate familiar tropes from the Grimms’ Fairy Tales into the Disney remake that children know and love. The trope used in Cinderella that is the most downplayed is the broken Aesop. This means that a 'moral' presented doesn't match the morals found the original story. So this new moral is put into the story but it really doesn’t belong and is there to solve an unsolvable problem. An upset Cinderella is visited by her …show more content…

Simply put, the transformation from poor or ugly to beautiful. In the movie, Cinderella has her rags to riches story. She goes from being a servant to living in a castle with her prince. This is also seen when the stepmother takes all of her father’s money and gives none to Cinderella. Before the ball, Cinderella had bad fortune and after the transformation, she is presented with wealth as well as a better life altogether. Though it is not quite rags to riches rather she recovers her riches. Other works that use the makeover trope is Mulan when Mulan had clearly changed from a girl to a

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