Gretel’s version -Garrison Keillor
‘Gretel’ by Garrison Keillor is an interpretation of the story
"Hansel and Gretel" from the perspective of a female. The interpreter
is Gretel who denies her cowardice in the original story. She claims that the
depiction is distorted one.
Gretel says that there was an understanding between her and her
brother to sell their story to Grimm brothers. They had signed in a contract
paper with an agreement to share fifty-fifty of the profit. But unexpectedly,
Gretel found the story published the other day totally different order. The
story depicts her as coward and her brother as a brave person. She claims the
brother was, in reality, a coward not vice versa. It was her brother who wept
time and again, and she had to carry him. The portrayal of he father and mother
is also distorted. Father was not so kind hearted; he was a drunkard; he liked
to watch bull fight. Mother was not cruel in any sense of the word. Gretel
describes their parents leaving them in the forest as a natural phenomenon of
the time. Parents used to leave the children in forest hoping that they will be
better cared in forest by frog, raven or saints. She claims that she was not
worried when she in the forest, as she had known the reality. At last, she
repents for killing the witch, for the witch was not after her; she had wanted
to kill Hansel.
Gretel supports her stepmother Gladys and finds her a loving mother.
She explains that the woman who gave them cake, bread and house was not a witch
but a loving woman who wanted to kill Hansel in order to revolt against male
dominance.
Questions to be discussed:
1. Why does Gretel blame her father and brother? [058-3]
2. Do you think Gretel represents modern feminist women? Give your
opinion briefly. [061-3]
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