Frank L. Borchardt |
Fairy tales take the world inside us and push it into the outside
world, so we're really looking at ourselves," says Frank L.
Borchardt, a professor of Germanic languages and literature who
teaches "Fairy Tales: Grimms to Disney." In "Beauty
and the Beast," for example, the Beast's repulsive exterior
reflects his inner anguish. His eventual transformation represents
self-realization and redemption , themes that have permeated fairy
tales for generations.
"Beauty and the Beast" transmits the most important moral
in the fairy-tale genre, according to Borchardt: "to have
a good heart." Although goodness is usually rewarded with
love, wealth, or power, "wickedness is very severely punished," he
says. There's "lots of sadism and violence, lots of dismemberment" in
fairy tales.
Although many of his students have grown up with Walt Disney versions
of these stories, Borchardt reintroduces his students to the heroes
and heroines, mischief-makers and evildoers of their childhood
in the original, tried-and-true versions. "My approach is
wildly old-fashioned."
He challenges his students to explore various versions and interpretations
of the classic tales by contrasting modern critiques and retellings
with classic Grimm brothers fairy tales, arguably the most influential
works of the genre.
The Grimms "brought prestige to this literature," says
Borchardt. The brothers collected fables and folk tales from around
the world and compiled them into one comprehensive compilation,
The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales, 210 stories in all. Many of the
stories are cleaned up and Christianized versions of traditional
folk tales, Borchardt says.
Princesses and princes, frogs and wolves, witches and goblins have
their place in every culture. Fairy tales transcend boundaries
of language, space, and time to convey motifs and morals that speak
to every society. Ultimately, Borchardt hopes that by taking his
course, his students cultivate "an abiding affection for the
stories and for this kind of storytelling from all over the world."
Prerequisites
None
Readings
Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a
Thousand Faces
Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm,
The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales
Christopher Vogler, The Writer's Journey: Mythic Structure for
Writers
Stuart Voytilla, Myth and the Movies: Discovering the Mythic
Structure of 50 Unforgettable Films
Professor
Frank L. Borchardt is professor
of Germanic languages and literature and professor of education.
From 1983 to 1997 he led the projects that produced the CALIS (Computer
Assisted Language Instructional System) markup language for instructional
exercises and its successor WinCALIS. He was executive director
of the Computer Assisted Language Instructional Consortium (CALICO)
and editor of the CALICO Journal from 1991 to 1997. He teaches
language and literature in the German department and the occasional
educational technologies seminar in the program in education.
Assignments
Weekly online postings
Become an expert on three designated Grimm
fairy tales
Original fairy tale of 800-1,000 words
Bound portfolio including
all work from the course
--Emily Znamierowski '07 |