A question for my readers:
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A question for my readers:
I could use some ideas for new blog entries. What kinds of topics involving German folklore would you be interested in reading about?
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles
Commentaries on German Folklore
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles (sunkencastles.com)
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A question for my readers:
I could use some ideas for new blog entries. What kinds of topics involving German folklore would you be interested in reading about?
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles
Commentaries on German Folklore
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles (sunkencastles.com)
I would enjoy some material on the detectives who gathered all these tales.
Clemens Brentano and Achim von Arnim, who published Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy's Magic Horn, 1805–1808), a major collection of German folk songs that actually inspired the Grimms to begin their own work.
Dorothea Viehmann, a storyteller from Hesse who contributed many tales directly to the Grimms — she was arguably one of their most important sources, though often uncredited.
The Wild family (particularly the sisters Dortchen and Gretchen), neighbors of the Grimms who told them numerous stories. Wilhelm eventually married Dortchen Wild.
Ludwig Bechstein, who later published his own Deutsches Märchenbuch (1845), which was actually more popular than the Grimms' collection for a time in the 19th century.
The Grimms also corresponded with folklore collectors across Europe, including the Scandinavian Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe, creating a whole network of folklore scholarship.
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I would enjoy some material on the detectives who gathered all these tales.
Clemens Brentano and Achim von Arnim, who published Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy's Magic Horn, 1805–1808), a major collection of German folk songs that actually inspired the Grimms to begin their own work.
Dorothea Viehmann, a storyteller from Hesse who contributed many tales directly to the Grimms — she was arguably one of their most important sources, though often uncredited.
The Wild family (particularly the sisters Dortchen and Gretchen), neighbors of the Grimms who told them numerous stories. Wilhelm eventually married Dortchen Wild.
Ludwig Bechstein, who later published his own Deutsches Märchenbuch (1845), which was actually more popular than the Grimms' collection for a time in the 19th century.
The Grimms also corresponded with folklore collectors across Europe, including the Scandinavian Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe, creating a whole network of folklore scholarship.
Goos point - there is certainly a lot to talk about here!
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System shared this topic
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A question for my readers:
I could use some ideas for new blog entries. What kinds of topics involving German folklore would you be interested in reading about?
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles
Commentaries on German Folklore
Sunken Castles, Evil Poodles (sunkencastles.com)
@juergen_hubert I'd be interested in learning if you think there are any noteworthy regional trends in folktales (such as particular plot points, creatures, or characters that appear predominantly in the folktales of a certain corner of the German-speaking world).
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@juergen_hubert I'd be interested in learning if you think there are any noteworthy regional trends in folktales (such as particular plot points, creatures, or characters that appear predominantly in the folktales of a certain corner of the German-speaking world).
This is easily something that entire PhD theses could be written about.
Which isn't my ambition (I already have one, and no desire to get more), but I could talk about a few trends that I noticed.