Which Cinderella Fairy Tale Author Inspired Modern Versions?

2026-06-26 21:03:20 217
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2 Answers

Bella
Bella
2026-06-30 06:29:40
Honestly, I think we give Perrault too much credit. The Basile version, 'Cenerentola,' from 1634, has the step-sisters, the ball, and a slipper too (though it's a chopine, a platform shoe). It's way weirder and darker—the stepmother kills the first governess by breaking her neck! That raw, visceral energy feels closer to a lot of modern, gritty adaptations than Perrault's polite French court version. Authors looking for a less sanitized, more psychologically complex foundation might be pulling from that Italian well, consciously or not. It's a reminder that the tale was always shape-shifting.
Daniel
Daniel
2026-07-02 05:24:17
this question always circles back to Charles Perrault. His 1697 collection 'Histoires ou contes du temps passé' gave us the version most people recognize. The glass slipper, the fairy godmother, the pumpkin coach—those are all Perrault's inventions. The earlier Italian and Chinese variants, like the ones in Basile's 'Pentamerone' or the Ye Xian story, are fascinating but lack those iconic trappings. Perrault polished a rougher, often more brutal oral tradition into a narrative that emphasizes grace, forgiveness, and a kind of magical gentility over gritty survival or vengeance. It's his framework that Disney adapted, and it's his morality—the idea that kindness is rewarded—that seeped into so many modern retellings. The story became less about outsmarting a cruel family and more about virtue being recognized by external, almost divine, intervention.

That said, Perrault's influence is so total it's almost invisible. When someone says 'Cinderella,' you don't think of a girl hiding in a tree or being helped by a fish, you think of the ball and the slipper. Modern authors riffing on the tale, from Gail Carson Levine's 'Ella Enchanted' to the film 'Ever After,' are working within the space he carved out, even when they're pushing against its classist or passive elements. They're reacting to his version as much as they're inspired by it. My copy of his tales is falling apart from all the times I've flipped to that story to compare notes.
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