The famous tale of Sleeping Beauty is believed to have originated from centuries-old European folklore. The earliest known written version appeared in the French work Le Roman de Perceforest (circa 1330-1344), followed by the Italian rendition Sun, Moon, and Talia by Basile (1634), Perrault’s The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood (1697), and the Grimm brothers’ Little Briar Rose (1812). A common theme of the various versions is that an infant girl is cursed to prick her finger on a wooden spindle (or flax) years later, causing her to become stuporose or to die. This raises the question: could this peculiar scenario be based on an actual medical condition?
Spinning a Yarn-Sleeping Beauty and Anthrax
Zalaudek, Iris
2016-01-01
Abstract
The famous tale of Sleeping Beauty is believed to have originated from centuries-old European folklore. The earliest known written version appeared in the French work Le Roman de Perceforest (circa 1330-1344), followed by the Italian rendition Sun, Moon, and Talia by Basile (1634), Perrault’s The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood (1697), and the Grimm brothers’ Little Briar Rose (1812). A common theme of the various versions is that an infant girl is cursed to prick her finger on a wooden spindle (or flax) years later, causing her to become stuporose or to die. This raises the question: could this peculiar scenario be based on an actual medical condition?File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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