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Parents vow to read children fairy tales as young Britons think they are inappropriate

‘What is wrong with these snowflakes?’ Parents vow to carry on reading their children traditional fairy tales despite survey showing younger adults think they are sexist, inappropriate and perpetuate gender stereotypes

  • Angry parents have criticised those who do not read their children fairy tales
  • More than 40 per cent of under-30s believe traditional fables are inappropriate
  • Eighty-nine per cent said they perpetuate old-fashioned gender stereotypes 

Parents have vowed to continue reading their children traditional fairy tales despite a survey showing younger adults think they are inappropriate and perpetuate gender stereotypes.

A recent survey revealed that young Brits think they are sexist, outdated and too scary for young children.

Forty-six per cent of Brits under 30 believe that traditional fairy tales, including Hansel and Gretel and Rumpelstiltskin, are inappropriate.

As many as 90 per cent of young people believe that the tales are old-fashioned with 89 per cent of people surveyed saying they perpetuate gender stereotypes. 

Seventy seven per cent believe that the classic stories are sexist while a quarter of parents said they wouldn’t read ‘offensive’ tales to their young children at bedtime.  

But parents have hit back, saying that fairy tales showed them both sides of life and that reading them to their young children was an experience they loved. 

One mother said on Facebook: ‘My children loved all the fairy tales – the more gruesome the better – you are the best judge of your children’s reaction but don’t ban these stories for the rest of us because you don’t like them.

‘They always have a good ending – the baddie gets his deserved punishment!’

Forty-six per cent of Brits under 30 believe that traditional fairy tales, including Hansel and Gretel and Rumpelstiltskin, are inappropriate

Parents have vowed to continue reading their children traditional fairy tales despite a survey showing younger adults think they are inappropriate and perpetuate gender stereotypes

Another parent added: ‘I love books and I loved reading them to my children. Stop preaching and dictating to parents!’ 

Mother-of-one Shay Kaur Grewal said: ‘These are very old folk tales from the 18th century with Brothers Grimm and they have been changed and adapted. What may have been okay in the 18th century, we already know that it is not okay today.

‘I think we are reading a little too much into it. We all need to lighten up a bit,’ she said today on Good Morning Britain.

She added: ‘There are tons of hidden meanings behind the stories. Like Hansel and Gretel teaches children that they should not speak to strangers. The more modern day versions give you an opportunity to talk about these sorts of things.’

Others have expressed their disbelief that some children are missing out on fairy tale bedtime reading.

Frustrated parents have expressed their disbelief that some young people do not want to read traditional fairy tales to their children

Hansel and Gretel was voted by young Brits to be the most inappropriate fairy tale, with 46 per cent saying it was not a good bedtime story. The fable sees two young children on the brink of starvation come across a house made from sweets in the woods. They are lured inside by a cannibalistic witch and have to escape 

Little Red Riding Hood was another classic voted inappropriate by 28% of Britons. It sees a young girl pursued through the forest by a hungry wolf, who, in some version of the tale, murders her grandmother

Rumpelstilskin is also on the naughty list, with 25 per cent of parents saying it is inappropriate. A quarter of parents are worried about the classic tales and won’t read books to children if they think it will frighten them

Hansel and Gretel, a story in which small children roast a cannibalistic witch to death in her own oven, was voted the most inappropriate by 46 per cent of people. 

Little Red Riding Hood was also not a favourite, with 28 per cent saying the fable of the wolf in the woods was unacceptable.

It tells the story of a young girl who visits her grandma at her house in the woods but the wolf ends up eating the helpless grandma in the darker versions of the fairy tale. 

Generation Z do not like Rumpelstiltskin either, as a quarter of people asked said it was inappropriate. 

The cannibalistic imp apparently wants to eat a firstborn baby who he takes from a young girl in exchange for some straw spun into gold.   

Many of the tales are believed to be sexist and to perpetuate outdated and old-fashioned gender stereotypes, including Beauty And The Beast

The Snow Queen, another popular fairy tale based on the stories of Hans Christian Andersen, is considered inappropriate by 13 per cent of young Brits

The industrious three little pigs are not high on the list of favourite fairy tales, with 12 per cent of people thinking it was inappropriate

Beauty And The Beast, The Snow Queen and The Three Little Pigs are also under fire, according to the under-30s asked in a survey of 2,000 Brits.

Beauty and the Beast has been slammed by parents for a sexist story line and outdated gender stereotypes. 

Belle, which means pretty in French, falls in love with an ugly beast, who transforms into a handsome prince when the pair kiss. 

The Snow Queen is a dark and mysterious tale with a creepy anti-heroine who wants to freeze a young boy called Kai. 

The Three Little Pigs alludes to attempted murder of the piglets by the ‘big bad’ wolf, who blows two of their houses down. 

However, some traditional stories remain popular. Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White And The Seven Dwarves were the most popular nostalgic tales. 

The Little Mermaid is also a fan favourite. Disney is launching a live-action remake featuring Halle Bailey as Ariel next year. 

The live-action remake of The Little Mermaid will be released next year. The story, which remains one of Britain’s favourite fairy tales, was made into an animated film (left) in 1989. The remake features Halle Bailey as Ariel

Many of the stories have been developed and adapted using the original tales written by the Brothers Grimm, who published folklore in the early 19th century.

Nearly a third of Britons said they were shocked to discover some of the darker elements in the original versions

In Snow White And The Seven Dwarves, the evil Queen wants to eat Snow White’s organs. 

The nasty stepsisters in Cinderella mutilate themselves in some versions of the story to try and fit their feet into the small shoe that Prince Charming brings them. 

In some versions of the much-loved story, Cinderella’s evil stepsisters mutilate their feet by chopping off toes to fit their feet into the glass shoe

Nearly 25 per cent of parents are worried about their children being frightened by the fairy tales, and a quarter wouldn’t read certain stories to their children before bed if they thought they were outdated or old-fashioned.  

Nearly half of young Brits are still happy however to use the traditional tales to teach children about morals and a quarter say they have happy memories of being read the stories when they themselves were children. 

The figures come from a survey commissioned by Twinkly, a lighting brand that has created its own colourful lighting effects inspired by the popular children’s stories.  

The dark side of fairytales: Author Nick Jubber reveals how German, Danish and Russian tales come from writers whose lives were filled with war and poverty  

Nicholas Jubber is the author of The Fairy Tellers: A Journey into the Secret History of Fairy Tales, published on 20 January 2022 by John Murray Press, priced at £20 and available online and from all good bookshops.

‘A witch lives in a hut on chicken legs, surrounded by a fence of human skulls.

A young mother has her babies taken away and is accused of eating them.

A mermaid’s tongue is cut out by a sea-witch.

When we say ‘fairy tale’, we may think of happy-ever-afters, princesses in pointy hats and fairy godmothers.

But under the gentle covers of our traditional fairy tales are sharp fangs dripping with blood, like the wolf waiting to gobble up Little Red Riding Hood.

We find this darkness in all the classics, from the tales of the Brothers Grimm to Hans Christian Andersen, with body-counts to rival any modern horror franchise.

On a journey around the history of fairy tales, I found myself asking this question: what makes the old fairy tales so dark? Not the watered-down versions dished up by Disney, but the traditional early versions.

Scholars have tangled them up in a thousand and one theories, but there’s a simple reason for the darkness: the tales are dark because the lives of the original tellers were.

The Brothers Grimm and Dortchen Wild

The Brothers Grimm (pictured)  lived in a world at war. The region where they lived, Hesse, in Germany, was occupied by the army of Napoleon and the dictator’s brother, a dissolute bigamist, seized the throne

Amongst the storytellers who narrated tales to the brothers – stories such as ‘Rumpelstiltskin’ and ‘The Elves and the Shoemaker’ – was Dortchen Wild (pictured) an apothecary’s daughter who lived across the street. Dortchen’s family was so fed up with the French soldiers, her sister once declared ‘I want to kill that swine!’ But when the Napoleonic troops were booted out, matters didn’t improve. Cossack troops from Russia arrived, bunking down on straw mattresses in Dortchen’s house, demanding hospitality. To make matters worse, Dortchen lived in the shadow of a very stern father, who disapproved of her friendship with the story-gathering brothers across the road.

The Brothers Grimm lived in a world at war.

The region where they lived, Hesse, in Germany, was occupied by the army of Napoleon and the dictator’s brother, a dissolute bigamist, seized the throne.

Amongst the storytellers who narrated tales to the brothers – stories such as ‘Rumpelstiltskin’ and ‘The Elves and the Shoemaker’ – was Dortchen Wild, an apothecary’s daughter who lived across the street.

Dortchen’s family was so fed up with the French soldiers, her sister once declared: ‘I want to kill that swine!’ But when the Napoleonic troops were booted out, matters didn’t improve.

Cossack troops from Russia arrived, bunking down on straw mattresses in Dortchen’s house, demanding hospitality.

To make matters worse, Dortchen lived in the shadow of a very stern father, who disapproved of her friendship with the story-gathering brothers across the road.

No wonder darkness pervades her tales. In one of the stories she told, ‘Sweetheart Roland’, a girl is murdered in her sleep and her blood betrays the whereabouts of the escaping lovers.

In the popular tale of ‘The Six Swans’, a young mother’s newborn babies are taken away from her, her lips are smeared with blood and she is accused of eating them.

She can’t even protest her innocence, because she has taken a vow of silence.

Even the much-loved ‘Hansel and Gretel’, another tale narrated by Dortchen, is hardly as sweet as the gingerbread house for which it’s known.

The witch intends to eat her two child captives, and they are only in her clutches because their parents have abandoned them in the woods (and in the original version, it’s the children’s mother – not their stepmother – who insists on throwing them out!).

Ivan Khudiakov

Author Nick Jubber is pictured

These stories have been sanitised over the centuries, so we can see them now as cheerful tales to share with our children.

But it’s hard to sanitise the Russian fairy tales – it’s the darkness that makes them so engrossing!

At their heart is Baba Yaga, a fearsome witch with iron teeth who lives in a hut that moves about on a pair of giant chicken legs, with a bathhouse full of frogs and eels.

In one of the tales, a girl turns up at Baba Yaga’s house and has to carry out various chores in order to be spared.

Her housework is exemplary, so she is given a chest full of money. But her step-sister turns up, eager for rewards of her own. She performs her tasks badly, so instead of being given money she is burned to death.

This story was written down by a Russian folklorist called Ivan Khudiakov, after hearing it narrated in a village near Moscow.

Almost completely unknown in the English-speaking world, Khudiakov was an extraordinary character.

He roamed the villages of the Ryazan region, wrote down the stories he heard and published his first collection of tales at the age of just eighteen.

But he recognised the connection between these tales and the brutal lives of the serfs who narrated them.

Keen to improve their conditions, he worked on reading and writing projects and joined a radical outfit seeking to flatten the Russian class system.

Not a wise move if you want an easy life – embroiled in a failed plot to assassinate the Tsar, he was arrested and sent to the coldest town on earth.

He wasted away in Siberia, ending up in a psychiatric ward.

According to one of his last visitors, ‘Everything black, gloomy, flooded his once bright thoughts.’

A few weeks later, his body was tipped into a grave reserved for criminals and vagrants.

Hans Christian Andersen

Hans Christian Andersen started life in dire poverty, his mother working as a washerwoman, whilst his father was a cobbler who died after an ill-fated stint in the army, his grandfather was an inmate at the local asylum and his aunt ran a brothel

Happy ever after was out of reach for many of these old tellers of tales.

But one figure who bucked the trend was Hans Christian Andersen.

‘My life is a fairy tale,’ he declared.

He started life in dire poverty, his mother working as a washerwoman, whilst his father was a cobbler who died after an ill-fated stint in the army, his grandfather was an inmate at the local asylum and his aunt ran a brothel.

He left his hometown of Odense for Copenhagen, where he was mocked for his provincial accent and gangly figure, but over time his relentless determination won people over, and the popularity of his stories led him to enjoy the hospitality of the Duke of Weimar and Charles Dickens, amongst others.

As he put it towards the end of his life: ‘I have drunk my chocolate with the Queen, sitting opposite her and the King at the table’.

The misery of his early life, however, haunted his tales.

The sea-witch’s extraction of the Little Mermaid’s tongue echoed Andersen’s feeling of voicelessness when he emigrated from provincial Odense to Copenhagen.

The Little Match Girl, dying of the cold, could have been Andersen himself in his early days in Copenhagen; and he compared his experience of other people’s contempt to his tale of ‘The Ugly Duckling’.

Loss pervades many of Andersen’s tales.

One of my personal favourites is ‘The Wood Nymph’, in which a forest sprite yearns for the city lights and achieves her dream, dancing the can-can and visiting the Paris Exhibition, before dissolving to a single drop of water.

Sacrifices are made, and happiness rarely comes without a cost.

Redemptive as many fairy tales are, promising a way out of the dark, on a deeper level they warn us of the loss and pain likely to assail us on the difficult path to happily-ever-after.’