Indian Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs (best books to read for students TXT) 📕
Description
Although many readers might associate the term “fairy tales” with the Germanic or Celtic folk tale tradition—like in the stories collected by the Brothers Grimm—countries like India have their own rich history of fairy tales. Many of these tales, infused with a local flavor, bear a striking structural and thematic similarity to those with which Western readers are accustomed: moral allegories, talking animals, gambling incidents, and the like. Joseph Jacobs has carefully selected 29 fairy tales from the Jatakas, the Fables of Bidpai, the Tales of the Sun, the Baluchi Folktales, the Folktales of Kashmir, and other Sanskrit sources. These stories are a humorous and imaginative showcase of India’s rich fairy tale tradition.
Joseph Jacobs was an Australian folklorist who devoted most of his career to collecting fairy tales from around the world. His collections on English fairy tales have immortalized stories such as “Jack and the Beanstalk,” “Goldilocks and the Three Bears,” “The Three Little Pigs,” “Jack the Giant Killer” and “The History of Tom Thumb.”
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- Author: Joseph Jacobs
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Source.—The “Lola Jātaka,” Fausböll, No. 274, kindly translated and slightly abridged for this book by Mr. W. H. D. Rouse.
Remarks.—We began with an animal Jataka, and may appropriately finish with one which shows how effectively the writers of the Jatakas could represent animal folk, and how terribly moral they invariably were in their tales. I should perhaps add that the Bodhisat is not precisely the Buddha himself but a character which is on its way to becoming perfectly enlightened, and so may be called a future Buddha.
Endnotes“History of the Aesopic Fable,” the introductory volume to my edition of Caxton’s Fables of Esope (London, Nutt, 1889). ↩
An admirable and full account of this literature was given by M. A. Barth in Mélusine, t. IV No. 12, and t. V No. 1. See also Table I of Prof. Rhys-Davids’ Birth Stories. ↩
Finland boasts of 12,000, but most of these lie unprinted among the archives of the Helsingfors Literary Society. ↩
ColophonIndian Fairy Tales
was published in 1892 by
Joseph Jacobs.
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