Than All the Treasures
par user7675833 surname7675833 @permalink7675833
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In my class, I make many references to fairytales and use them often as inspiration for my own writing. "Than All the Treasures" is my version Rumpelstiltskin in a modern world.
One source of inspiration was Lewis Buzbee's poem "Sunday, Tarzan in His Hammock." In it, Buzbee challenges the conventional perception of Tarzan, inviting the reader to find greater emotional and philosophical depths of a one-dimensional hero. (Read the full poem here: https://www.lewisbuzbee.com/bio.htm.) I used that same approach, interrogating the motives of a traditional villain. In the traditional fairytale, Rumeplstiltskin helps a woman in a serious jam. Why does he help? Why did he want to have her first-born child?
To understand what elements of the classic narrative would translate into the modern world, I spent a lot of time with original fairytale and various translations. This also meant researching the land and time of the original tale. I'm definitely analog, with all of my notebooks, but I keep track of my research on Bear. (The app: https://bear.app.)
The final story places Rumpelstiltskin in a modern situation, jumping back in time to explore the original narrative. The story was accepted by the Worcester Review and nominated for a Pushcart in 2016.
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