Hans Christian Andersen

 

vCreated in 1837

vHe claims it is “utterly his own invention”, although a lot of themes, such a mermaids, were present at the time.

vThe fairytale was formed around Andersen’s social and political struggles.

 

Copenhagen, Denmark

 

vThis story inspired a statue that was presented to the city of Copenhagen in 1913.

vThe statue is made of bronze and is 5 1/2 feet tall and weighs 385 pounds.

vThis statue is one of the most popular tourist sites in Denmark.

 

 

The side of “The Little Mermaid” you never Considered

 

vAndersen was a homosexual and played a role in society for many years.

vThe Little Mermaid played a role in society, faking qualities that allowed for her acceptance, much like Andersen did.

v“His story expressed his own discomfort and loss of voice as he attempted to “pass” in high society.”

vA biographer believed “Andersen was a repressed homosexual and sees the longing and suffering in “The Little Mermaid” as an expression of his painful, never satisfied desires.” 

 

“Your fish’s tail, which amongst us is considered so beautiful, is thought on earth to be quite ugly; they do not know any better, and they think it necessary to have two stout props which they call legs, in order to be handsome.”

 

Andersen Shining Through

 

vHe writes of a “big city near the coast”- at the time, Andersen was living Copenhagen on a street that starts at the harbor and runs along a canal.

vThe one of the sisters also see “beautiful green hills covered with grapevines” which is reminiscent of Italy, a place Andersen was found of- it was also the setting for his first novel.

 

 

 

 

 

Andersen claims he did not get his mermaid story from Undine but in a letter

to a friend he writes “I have not, like de la Motte Fouquet in Undine, let the mermaid’s gaining an immortal soul depend on a stranger, on the love of another person. It is definitely the wrong thing to do. It would make  it a matter of chance and I’m not going to accept that in this world. I have made my mermaid take a more natural, divine path.”

 

The Disney Version Deconstructed

vReal versus imaginary

Ø“In this dualistic and hierarchical construction, the human world can be aligned with the white male system and the water world situated outside that system.”

 

 

 

 

vMembers outside the white male system include Ariel, Sebastian, Flounder, Ursula.

vFeminism found in the movie

Ø“Bright young women sick of swimming, ready to stand.” -Part of a song sung by Ariel

vDisney as a sanitizer

ØThey remove the majority of the violence

ØThe story, overall, is happier than the original.

ØAriel’s choices appear “cost-free”.

v