TY - JOUR
T1 - Wooing Werewolves
T2 - Girls' Genius, Feminine, and Initiation in Angela Carter's and Märta Tikkanen's Versions of "Little Red Riding Hood"
AU - Wide, Carola Maria
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, FB and Media Group of Estonian Literary Museum. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Girls’ initiation contributes to cultural representations in Western folk fairy tales. This study examines girls’ initiation in three contemporary versions of “Little Red Riding Hood”, Angela Carter’s “The Company of Wolves” and “Wolf-Alice” (1979), and Märta Tikkanen’s Rödluvan (Little Red Riding Hood, 1986), in relation to “The Story of Grandmother”, popularized by Paul Delarue (1956). Combining fairy-tale research with Kristevan theories on subjectivity, the feminine, and the genius, it examines how initiation assigns to the girl in Delarue’s tale a social identity and role as a woman and how the contemporary tales negotiate this through the heroines’ wooing of werewolves. The findings, presented in both written and visual forms, show the reach of the heroines’ feminine psychosexual maturity, here called the girl genius, in Carter’s and Tikkanen’s versions, representing an alternative to traditional assumptions of girls’ psychosexuality within normative heterosexuality.
AB - Girls’ initiation contributes to cultural representations in Western folk fairy tales. This study examines girls’ initiation in three contemporary versions of “Little Red Riding Hood”, Angela Carter’s “The Company of Wolves” and “Wolf-Alice” (1979), and Märta Tikkanen’s Rödluvan (Little Red Riding Hood, 1986), in relation to “The Story of Grandmother”, popularized by Paul Delarue (1956). Combining fairy-tale research with Kristevan theories on subjectivity, the feminine, and the genius, it examines how initiation assigns to the girl in Delarue’s tale a social identity and role as a woman and how the contemporary tales negotiate this through the heroines’ wooing of werewolves. The findings, presented in both written and visual forms, show the reach of the heroines’ feminine psychosexual maturity, here called the girl genius, in Carter’s and Tikkanen’s versions, representing an alternative to traditional assumptions of girls’ psychosexuality within normative heterosexuality.
KW - 616 Other humanities
KW - 612,2 Literature studies
KW - Angela Carter
KW - Little Red Riding Hood
KW - Märta Tikkanen
KW - abjection
KW - girls’ initiation
KW - menstruation
KW - the Kristevan feminine
KW - the Kristevan subject
KW - the girl genius
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192369901&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7592/FEJF2024.92.wide
DO - 10.7592/FEJF2024.92.wide
M3 - Article
SN - 1406-0957
VL - 92
SP - 99
EP - 120
JO - Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore
JF - Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore
IS - 1
ER -