Narodnye russkie skazki Essays

  • Analasys of Russian Fairy Tales

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    even mention a fairy! In Russian fairy tales, however, they are a bit more honest. These Russian stories are divided up into many categories. The word skazka means "story". In russian, they have lshebniyi skazki, or “magical tales,” skazki o zhivotnykh, or “tales about animals,” and bytovye skazki, or “tales of everyday life,” to name only a few of the many categories russian "fairy tales" can be titled under. Given this difference, it comes as no shock that the difference in European and Russian

  • Compare and Contrast of Joy Williams’s Baba Iaga and the Pelican Child and Alexander Afanasev’s The Frog Princess

    1436 Words  | 3 Pages

    In one, a specimen-creating brute robs a pelican child’s life and her guardian trying to bring her back to life. In the other, a prince learns the value of his frog-turned-princess and sets out on a quest to find her. Joy Williams’s Baba Iaga and the Pelican Child and Alexander Afanasev’s The Frog Princess are both critical facets of the fairy tale genre. While initially it may seem that Williams preserved no elements from Afanasev’s tale, upon a closer glance, it is evident that the two tales’ similarities