{"id":5041,"date":"2011-05-09T09:00:37","date_gmt":"2011-05-09T08:00:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=5041"},"modified":"2011-05-09T09:00:37","modified_gmt":"2011-05-09T08:00:37","slug":"fairy-tale-fest-the-best-adaptation-of-the-little-mermaid-ive-ever-seen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/05\/09\/fairy-tale-fest-the-best-adaptation-of-the-little-mermaid-ive-ever-seen\/","title":{"rendered":"Fairy Tale Fest: The Best Adaptation of The Little Mermaid I’ve Ever Seen"},"content":{"rendered":"
I think I first encountered the
Little Mermaid<\/strong> story when Disney’s film dropped in 1989.
Mermaid Mania quickly descended, and “mermaid!” began to trump
“fireman!” when people asked me what I wanted to be when I grew
up. I’ve had a soft spot for mermaids and sea sirens ever
since.<\/p>\n
<\/a>But I was in for a shock one day at school, when I settled myself
down in the Book Corner with the Ladybird Well-Loved Tales version of
Hans Christian Anderson<\/strong>‘s text. The Mermaid
died<\/em> at the end? She
didn’t<\/em> marry the prince? And then was turned into a
“Daughter of the Air”, and wasn’t allowed a
Christian soul unless a zillion children did good deeds and
something-something-virtue? What a letdown. Expecting a
straightforward happy ending, I was utterly bewildered. Prince or no
prince, I hadn’t been prepared for quite so much all-out
morbidity, and if you asked me, this Daughters of the Air business
just sounded a bit suspicious.<\/p>\n
It’s one hell of a leap from the all-out romance of
Disney’s riff on the story to Anderson. Disney takes
Anderson’s curious young mermaid princess and gives her a
bit of sass, focusing the story on themes of adolescence and
coming of age and adding a saleable happy ending into the mix.
It’s a common refrain on feminist blogs to say that Disney
“sanitised the originals” (whatever
“original” means). Here, though, Disney at least
allows Ariel her desires, even if they are chastely presented, and
allows their fulfilment at the end. By contrast, Anderson focuses
on the dangers of curiosity and makes the story arc a recognisably
tragic one – and
later, it seems, tacked on the stuff about the Daughters of the
Air to add in a moral imperative for the reader<\/a>:
children, be good, else the mermaid will never earn her
Christian soul! <\/em><\/p>\n
<\/a>In both stories, identity and
self-knowledge is a key theme – and both mermaids are
willing to give up their voices and identities for love and to
gain access to the exciting, adult, otherworld of the land.
There’s something problematic about both of them –
with Anderson’s version, as Marina Warner puts it in From The Beast To The Blonde: On Fairy Tales And Their
Tellers<\/strong><\/a>, “the story’s chilling
message is that cutting out your tongue is still not enough.
To be saved, more is required: self-obliteration ,
dissolution.” With Disney, Warner ruminates that
“the issue of female desire dominates the film…
the verb ‘want’ falls from the lips of Ariel
more often than any other – until her tongue is cut
out”, concluding that – however much we want to
cry “sanitised!” – it is more that in the
film “romance constitutes the ultimate redemption, and
romantic love, personified by the prince, the justification
of desire”. So it’s a
kind<\/em> of sanitising, but it’s also a
secularising.<\/p>\n
All of which brings me to The Flight of the Mermaid<\/strong><\/a>,
Gita Wolf <\/strong>and
Sirish Rao<\/strong>‘s adaptation of the
tale, a wonderful picture book, now recently
reprinted by India-based publishing house Tara Books<\/strong><\/a>. This version
re-energises Anderson’s original storyline
and tells it in such a way that it becomes,
devoid of its Victorian moralising, a genuinely
life-affirming, feminist story. The real
achievement, though, is that it
keeps <\/em>the Daughters of the Air stuff,
and Anderson’s story structure, but
tells the story in such a way that a happy
ending is forged. And it’s an ending
that retains the sense for wanderlust Disney
gives its heroine, but doesn’t end in
the mermaid trading selfhood or identity for
marriage – at the same time neatly
avoiding Anderson’s preachy, morbid
shutdown of female desire or personal
autonomy.<\/p>\n
But let’s start with basic facts: the
book is
gorgeous.<\/em> Check it out!<\/p>\n
<\/a>Flight of the Mermaid
<\/strong>– skipping out the
diminuitive
little <\/em>from the title for a
start – is a treat for the
senses from start to finish.
Beautifully letter-pressed on
tactile, thick-grain paper, the
cover has a press-out fish shape
which doubles as a bookmark and
reveals the mermaid herself
underneath. The book is fully
illustrated with acclaimed artist
Bhajju Shyam<\/strong>‘s
distinctive artwork in the Gond
tribal style, and the results are
a wonderful, fresh contrast to the
European visualisations of this
story I’ve become so used
to. Look how colourful it
is!<\/p>\n
The title of the book also
describes the ending (skip to
after the grey blockquotes if
you don’t want the detail
spoilered!) – the mermaid
comes to the realisation that
the prince, though he is fond of
her, does not love her
romantically. She is saddened,
but will not kill him –
the only way she can save her
own life – and chooses to
sacrifice herself instead: yes,
familiar Anderson territory. And
yet:<\/p>\n
Slowly, the truth came over
her – her plight had
nothing to do with the prince
at all… he knew nothing
of her, and could not carry
the weight of her
dreams.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
And at the point where, in
Anderson, her tragic end is
mitigated only by the
Daughters of the Air
announcing “welcome to
the airy feminine purgatory
party!”, Wolf, Rao and
Shyam show the mermaid’s
transition into the air as a
change, not an ending:<\/p>\n
“Who are you?”
she asked, and found that
her voice had
returned.<\/p>\n
“We are the daughters
of the air, they answered.
“And now you are one
of us.”<\/p>\n
The mermaid was delighted.
“I was born into
water,” she said to
them. “And I know the
world on the shore too. Only
the air is left to explore,
and it seems to hold more
freedom than sea or
land.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The air is, logically, her
next destination on a
continuous journey. Always
on the move, the
mermaid’s real aim is
constant self-discovery and
adventure. Visually, in each
of her phases on land, sea,
and air, she retains her
flowing hair and colourful
attributes, whether they are
feathers or scales. Her
identity is always hers, and
is never
relinquished.<\/p>\n
It’s a wonderfully
executed blend of the
positive points of both
Anderson’s text and
the optimism the Disney
generation have come to
expect from the story, and
for parents, schools and
people who love beautifully
made books, I just
can’t recommend Tara
Books highly enough.<\/p>\n
We managed to grab five
minutes of co-author Gita
Wolf’s time, via
email, to ask her a little
about the book – why
this story?<\/p>\n
“We felt that the
story had universal
resonance,” says Gita.
“It was both a
coming-of-age tale as well
as the story of a journey
(both literal and
spiritual). When we first
told the story to Bhajju
Shyam, he related to it
right away.
‘That’s exactly
it!’ he said,
‘That’s what it
feels like to come into a
completely new element
– like when I traveled
to another country for the
first time. I lost my
language, and it felt like I
was [as Anderson’s
mermaid experiences when she
loses her voice] walking on
knives.'”<\/p>\n
How about the ending?
“We wanted to give the
tale a feminist twist, and
not focus on the loss of the
prince as an absolute tragic
end of everything –
nor did we want the Disney
ending. In keeping with
Anderson’s basic
narrative, the Mermaid in a
sense does go up in the air,
but the air is here a new
element to explore, and her
journey will
continue.”<\/p>\n
<\/a>All hail the flying
mermaid!<\/p>\n
Order your copy from Tara’s
UK distributors<\/a> or on
Amazon<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Find out
more<\/strong><\/p>\n
Warm thanks to
Maegan
Chadwick-Dobson<\/strong>,
Gita Wolf
<\/strong>and
Sirish
Rao<\/strong>
at Tara
Books for
taking the
time to
talk to
us,
sending us
parcels
and being
generally
lovely.<\/em><\/ul>\n
\n