for: Traditional stories
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Fairy Tale Channel. My blog is devoted to all aspects of fairy tales, saga and their translation, ... The Theme of Death and Resurrection in Fairy Tales ...www.fairytalechannel.org/Business Fables and Management Lessons
... executives, leaders, managers on business, management, leadership, and decision making drawn from famous fables and tales. ... Fables, Fairy Tales, Stories and ... Blog Submission Guide ...fairy-tales-fables-business.blogspot.com/Fairy Tale Stories Blog
Welcome to Fairy Tale Stories this a place of belief and ... Blog Home. Search for: Waltzing with Bears Ballade. Waltzing with Bears Ballade. Fairy Tale Store ...www.fairytalestoriesblog.com/Fairy Tale Review
To hear more about contemporary fairy tales as an innovative art form, ... blog for the literary journal Fairy Tale Review, a co-publication of Fairy Tale ...www.fairytalereview.blogspot.com/No More Fairy Tales - Andrew Cohen's Blog
Andrew Cohen's Blog. September 23, 2008. No More Fairy Tales ... Let's give up the need to believe in fairy tales. ... value of the frame "no more fairy tales" ...www.andrewcohen.org/blog/index.php?/blog/post/no-more-fairy-...for: Traditional stories

In cultures where demons and witches are perceived as real, fairy tales may merge into legendary narratives, where the context is perceived by teller and hearers as having historical actuality. However, unlike legends and epics they usually do not contain more than superficial references to religion and actual places, persons, and events; they take place once upon a time rather than in actual times.
Fairy tales are found in oral folktales and in literary form. The history of the fairy tale is particularly difficult to trace, because only the literary forms can survive. Still, the evidence of literary works at least indicates that fairy tales have existed for thousands of years, although not perhaps recognized as a genre; the name "fairy tale" was first ascribed to them by Madame d'Aulnoy. Literary fairy tales are found over the centuries all over the world, and when they collected them, folklorists found fairy tales in every culture. Fairy tales, and works derived from fairy tales, are still written today.
The older fairy tales were intended for an audience of adults as well as children, but they were associated with children as early as the writings of the précieuses; the Brothers Grimm titled their collection Children's and Household Tales, and the link with children has only grown stronger with time.
Folklorists have classified fairy tales in various ways. Among the most notable are the Aarne-Thompson classification system and the morphological analysis of Vladimir Propp. Other folklorists have interpreted the tales' significance, but no school has been definitively established for the meaning of the tales.
Defining marks
Although the fairy tale is a clearly distinct genre, the definition that marks a work as a fairy tale is a source of considerable dispute. Vladimir Propp, in his Morphology of the Folktale, criticized the common distinction between "fairy tales" and "animal tales" on the grounds that many tales contained both fantastic elements and animals. Nevertheless, to select works for his analysis, Propp used all Russian folktales classified as a folk lore Aarne-Thompson 300-749—in a cataloguing system that made such a distinction—to gain a clear set of tales. His own analysis identified fairy tales by their plot elements, but that in itself has been criticized, as the analysis does not lend itself easily to tales that do not involve a quest, and furthermore, the same plot elements are found in non-fairy tale works.

As Stith Thompson and Carter herself point out, talking animals and the presence of magic seem to be more common to the fairy tale than fairies themselves. However, the mere presence of animals that talk does not make a tale a fairy tale, especially when the animal is clearly a mask on a human face, as in fables.J. R. R. Tolkien, "On Fairy-Stories" , The Tolkien Reader, p. 15.























