请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 The Vain Little Mouse
释义

  1. Variants

  2. Origin

  3. Educational value

  4. References

  5. External links

The Vain Little Mouse ({{lang-es|La Ratita Presumida}}) is a folktale about a little mouse and her many suitors.

Variants

There are many variants of this tale. In some versions of the tale the she-mouse is seduced by the answer of the cat, who sweetly meows when asked what he will do at night. In this version the she-mouse marries the cat and she is usually eaten by the cat at the wedding night, though not always.

Other variants have a third part in which the he-mouse falls into a broth and dies, and even there is a fourth part, in which all the friends of the she-mouse harm themselves somehow describing their actions with a jingle, because they feel sorry for her. Each of these characters increase the seriousness of their self-destructive actions, singing a different jingle, but with parallelisms with the previous one.

The main character of the story can also have different representations such as a little ant or a little cockroach.

Origin

This tale seems to have been originated in the oral tradition and later moved to a literary form. Again, its literary form may have given birth to different variations. The earliest reference to this tale is found in Fernan Caballero's Lágrimas (1839) and La Gaviota (1856), but the complete tale is not written until later, in her compilation of tales Cuentos, oraciones, adivinanzas y refranes populares (1877). In this early version, the little she-mouse is actually a little ant, but she still marries a mouse, called Ratón Pérez. This little mouse ("ratón" in Spanish), would later inspire Padre Coloma, who would make him part of the Spanish traditional folklore by turning him into a sort of Tooth Fairy.

Fernan Caballero's version has the four parts explained in the previous section. The third and the fourth parts have a strong parallelism with the English Fairy Tale Titty Mouse and Tatty Mouse, first collected in Joseph Jacobs English Fairy Tales (1890). Joseph Jacobs found 25 variants of the same droll scattered over the world from India to Spain, and discusses various theories of its origin.[1]

A second literary reference can be found in Carmen Lyra's Cuentos de mi tía Panchita (1920), in which, although she acknowledges it to be the same tale as Fernan Caballero's, she also leaves room for an oriental or African origin. In fact, the tale is titled La Cucarachita Mandinga (Mandinga, the Little Roach) and Mandinga is just another name for the Mandinka people. This leads to believe of some influences from the slaves brought from Africa. The tales of the book became part of the Costa Rican folklore, but the Little Roach is also known in Cuba, Mexico and Panama. In Panama it became even more important as it is an important part of Panamanian folklore after it was turned into a children's theater play by Rogelio Sinán and with music of Gonzalo Brenes.

In some versions, the cockroach is not Mandinga, but Mondinga and in the Cuban and Caribbean version it seems to be Martina. Additionally, the representation of the main character can also change from country to country, probably depending on the greater influence of Carmen Lyra or Fernan Caballero. Puerto Rican Pura Belpré's version (as told to her by her grandmother) was the first one published in the US, translated as Perez and Martina: a Puerto Rican Folktale (1932). In 1936 Calleja published another version La hormiguita se quiere casar, in which the mouse in saved from the broth by the little ant.

There are a couple of contemporary versions that are worth mentioning, since they can easily be found in children's bookstores: Daniel Moreton's version (La Cucaracha Martina: a Caribbean folktale), which seems to take root in Belpre's version and Joe Hayes' version, which has replaced the roach with a butterfly in his tale Mariposa: the butterfly or Mariposa Mariposa: the happy tale of La Mariposa the butterfly

Educational value

The structure of this tale makes it suitable for personalization and adaptation to the particular children hearing it. It's also useful in order to teach the little kids about the animals and their different sounds, or to make them participate doing the sounds. Finally, some sense of danger can be taught to the audience in the first part of the tale, by mentioning objects that can harm them or things they shouldn't play with.

References

1. ^{{cite book|last1=Jacobs|first1=Joseph|authorlink1=Joseph Jacobs|last2=Batten|first2=John Dickson|authorlink2=John D. Batten|title=English Fairy Tales|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/English_Fairy_Tales/Notes_and_References#note16|edition=3rd|publisher=Putnam|location=New York|pages=78–80, 251–53}}

External links

  • Version of the tale (in Spanish)
  • Fernan Caballero's version (in Spanish)
  • Version of the tale as it appears in Cuentos de mi Tía Panchita (in Spanish)
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060714164000/http://autordelasemana.uchile.cl/caballero/lagaviota.pdf La Gaviota (in Spanish)]
  • La Cucarachita Mandinga, Theater Play by Rogelio Sinan (in Spanish)
  • Tópicos literarios y motivos folclóricos en el cuento popular
  • An Overview of Hispanic Literature with Special Emphasis on the Literature of Hispanics in the United States
  • Cuento Folklórico y Literaturas del Siglo XIX
  • English version of Martina the Roach{{Dead link|date=June 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20080106085453/http://pan.intrasun.tcnj.edu/501/projects/Muserlian/LaCucarachita.htm#CucarachSpanish Dual version (Spanish and English) of Martina the Roach]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Vain Little Mouse, The}}

8 : American fairy tales|Latin American folklore|Spanish legendary creatures|Spanish fairy tales|Fictional mice and rats|Spanish folklore|Animal tales|Female characters in fairy tales

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/25 4:40:15