The Thorns of Trauma: Torture, Aftermath, and Healing in Contemporary Fairy-Tale Literature

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    Abstract

    While classical fairy tales do not portray much depth of suffering, many contemporary fairy-tale retellings explore trauma and its aftermath in great detail. This article analyzes depictions of trauma in fairy tales, utilizing as a primary case study the “Beauty and the Beast” retelling A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas, arguing that this text provides a scientifically accurate representation of trauma and its aftermath, thereby articulating the real in fairy tales. Further, this article classifies that work as not simply a “dark” fairy tale (a contentious term that invites rethinking) but rather as fairy-tale torture porn, in a nod to the horror genre that foregrounds torture, surveillance, and the disruption of bodily boundaries and safety. However, the text’s optimistic account of healing is uniquely relevant in a time of widespread trauma due to a global pandemic, thereby demonstrating that fairy tales remain germane in contemporary contexts.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work - LAS
    Volume10
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Mar 11 2021

    Keywords

    • darkness
    • fairy tales
    • trauma

    Disciplines

    • Arts and Humanities
    • History
    • Other Arts and Humanities

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