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The Consequences Of The Goose Girl, A Fairy Tale

Decent Essays

Goose Girl is a fairy tale collected by the Grimm brothers who’s story line is about a young Princess arranged for a marriage with a far away prince, and is deceived from her title on her way to her bridegroom. Deceived and over-powered by her waiting-woman, the Princess shows development, but our dreamer for this analysis is the waiting-woman. Fairy tales are all about embracing birth rights, and this is exactly what the waiting woman is deviant about: she broke from the system and tries to work her way up a class that she is not born into. The waiting-woman struggles with her individuation, the process of accepting the daily events. Through this analysis, the consequences of not accepting the life you are born to live will serve as an example of a deeper evil. First, to begin this analysis, the archetypes are to be assigned. We will start with the shadow, represented by the Princess. Accordingly, this is a same sex character that at first embodies the elements a waiting-woman should have: quiet, submissive, and compliant because she “had to give away and let it be as [the waiting-woman] said” (583). The Princess carries the qualities that are considered to be expected of a waiting-woman. The opposite sex character that represents the animus in the waiting-woman’s story is the horse, Falada. The horse “noticed and remembered” the acts the waiting-woman commits, so she later on tries to get rid of the horse, who later develops the story in an indirect way (583). The waiting-woman’s self is represented by the casket-dragged-by-horses idea she pitched in for the King. Her refusal to become who she was intended to be led her to declaring her own fate. Moreover, to explain these labels, the important events relevant to the development of the waiting-woman should be recognized and explained. The waiting woman is first set on her journey to fulfill her duties beside the Princess after mounting their respective horses. On both occasions that the Princes has been thirsty, the waiting-woman declares “I will not be your slave. If you want a drink, you may get it yourself; I am not going to be your slave” (582). To this, the Princess does not respond; the second time around, as she bends to drink her water, she looses

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