Jack and the Beanstalk explained

Folk Tale Name:Jack and the Beanstalk
Aarne-Thompson Grouping:AT 328 ("The Treasures of the Giant")
Aka:Jack and the Giant man
Country:United Kingdom
Published In:Benjamin Tabart, The History of Jack and the Bean-Stalk (1807)
Joseph Jacobs, English Fairy Tales (1890)
Related:"Jack the Giant Killer"

"Jack and the Beanstalk" is an English fairy tale. It appeared as "The Story of Jack Spriggins and the Enchanted Bean" in 1734[1] and as Benjamin Tabart's moralized "The History of Jack and the Bean-Stalk" in 1807.[2] Henry Cole, publishing under pen name Felix Summerly, popularized the tale in The Home Treasury (1845),[3] and Joseph Jacobs rewrote it in English Fairy Tales (1890).[4] Jacobs' version is most commonly reprinted today, and is believed to be closer to the oral versions than Tabart's because it lacks the moralizing.[5]

"Jack and the Beanstalk" is the best known of the "Jack tales", a series of stories featuring the archetypal English hero and stock character Jack.[6]

According to researchers at Durham University and Universidade Nova de Lisboa, the story originated more than five millennia ago, based on a widespread archaic story form which is now classified by folklorists as ATU 328 The Boy Who Stole Ogre's Treasure.[7]

Story

Jack, a poor country boy, trades the family cow for a handful of magic beans, which grow into a massive, towering beanstalk reaching up into the clouds. Jack climbs the beanstalk and finds himself in the castle of an unfriendly giant. Jack went inside the house and found the giant’s wife in the kitchen. Jack said, “Could you please give me something to eat? I am so hungry!”. The kind wife gave him bread and some milk. While he was eating, the giant came home. The giant senses Jack's presence and cries,

Outwitting the giant, Jack is able to retrieve many goods from the giant, including a bag of gold, an enchanted goose that lays golden eggs and a magic golden harp that plays and sings by itself. Jack then escapes by chopping down the beanstalk. The giant, who is pursuing him, falls to his death, and Jack and his family prosper.

Origins

"The Story of Jack Spriggins and the Enchanted Bean" was published in London by J. Roberts in the 1734 second edition of Round About Our Coal-Fire.[1] In 1807, English writer Benjamin Tabart published The History of Jack and the Bean Stalk, possibly actually edited by William and/or Mary Jane Godwin.[8]

The story is older than these accounts. According to researchers at Durham University and the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, the tale type (AT 328, The Boy Steals Ogre's Treasure) to which the Jack story belongs may have had a Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) origin (the same tale also has Proto-Indo-Iranian variants), and so some think that the story would have originated millennia ago (4500 BC to 2500 BC).[7]

In some versions of the tale, the giant is unnamed, but many plays based on it name him Blunderbore (one giant of that name appears in the 18th-century tale "Jack the Giant Killer"). In "The Story of Jack Spriggins" the giant is named Gogmagog.[9]

The giant's catchphrase "Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman" appears in William Shakespeare's King Lear (c. 1606) in the form "Fie, foh, and fum, I smell the blood of a British man" (Act 3, Scene 4),[10] and something similar also appears in "Jack the Giant Killer".

Analogies

"Jack and the Beanstalk" is an Aarne-Thompson tale-type 328, The Treasures of the Giant, which includes the Italian "Thirteenth" and the French "How the Dragon Was Tricked" tales. Christine Goldberg argues that the Aarne-Thompson system is inadequate for the tale because the others do not include the beanstalk, which has analogies in other types[11] [12]

The Brothers Grimm drew an analogy between this tale and a German fairy tale, "The Devil With the Three Golden Hairs". The devil's mother or grandmother acts much like the giant's wife, a female figure protecting the child from the evil male figure.[13]

Moral perspectives

The original story portrays a "hero" gaining the sympathy of a man's wife, hiding in his house, robbing him, and finally killing him. In Tabart's moralized version, a fairy woman explains to Jack that the giant had robbed and murdered his father justifying Jack's actions as retribution[14] (Andrew Lang follows this version in the Red Fairy Book of 1890).

Jacobs gave no justification because there was none in the version he had heard as a child and maintained that children know that robbery and murder are wrong without being told in a fairy tale, but did give a subtle retributive tone to it by making reference to the giant's previous meals of stolen oxen and young children.[15]

Many modern interpretations have followed Tabart and made the giant a villain, terrorizing smaller folk and stealing from them, so that Jack becomes a legitimate protagonist. For example, the 1952 film starring Abbott and Costello the giant is blamed for poverty at the foot of the beanstalk, as he has been stealing food and wealth and the hen that lays golden eggs originally belonged to Jack's family. In other versions, it is implied that the giant had stolen both the hen and the harp from Jack's father. Brian Henson's 2001 TV miniseries not only abandons Tabart's additions but vilifies Jack, reflecting Jim Henson's disgust at Jack's unscrupulous actions.[16]

Adaptations

Film and TV

Live-action theatrical films

Live-action television films and series

Animated films

Foreign language animated films

Animated television series

Pantomime

Literature

Video games

Music

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Round About Our Coal Fire, or Christmas Entertainments. 1734. J. Roberts. 35–48. 4th edition On Commons
  2. Tabart, The History of Jack and the Bean-Stalk. in 1807 introduces a new character, a fairy who explains the moral of the tale to Jack (Matthew Orville Grenby, "Tame fairies make good teachers: the popularity of early British fairy tales", The Lion and the Unicorn 30.1 (January 20201–24).
  3. In 1842 and 1844 Elizabeth Rigby, Lady Eastlake, reviewed children's books for the Quarterly "The House [sic] Treasury, by Felix Summerly, including The Traditional Nursery Songs of England, Beauty and the Beast, Jack and the Beanstalk, and other old friends, all charmingly done and beautifully illustrated." (noted by Geoffrey Summerfield, "The Making of The Home Treasury", Children's Literature 8 (1980:35–52).
  4. Book: English Fairy Tales . Jacobs, Joseph . Joseph Jacobs. 1890 . David Nutt. London . 59–67, 233 .
  5. Tatar, Maria. The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales, p. 132.
  6. Web site: The Folklore Tradition of Jack Tales . . 15 Jan 2004 . The Center for Children's Books . Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign . 11 June 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140410004237/http://ccb.lis.illinois.edu/Projects/storytelling/jsthomps/tales.htm . 10 April 2014 .
  7. News: BBC. Fairy tale origins thousands of years old, researchers say. BBC News . 20 January 2016 . 20 January 2016.
  8. http://hockliffe.dmu.ac.uk/items/0019.html Anon., The History of Jack and the Bean-Stalk
  9. Book: The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature . 2015 . Oxford University Press . 305.
  10. Tatar, The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales, p. 136.
  11. Goldberg . Christine. The composition of Jack and the beanstalk . Marvels and Tales . 2001 . 15 . 11–26 . 10.1353/mat.2001.0008 . 162333097 . 2011-05-28 . (a possible reference to the genre anomaly)..
  12. [D. L. Ashliman|Ashliman, D. L.]
  13. Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm. "Devil With the Three Golden Hairs, The". Grimm's Household Tales: Annotated Tale at SurLaLune Fairy Tales.
  14. Tatar, Off with Their Heads! p. 198.
  15. https://www.surlalunefairytales.com/h-r/jack-beanstalk/jack-beanstalk-annotations.html Annotations to "Jack & the Beanstalk: Annotated Tale"
  16. Nazzaro, Joe (February 2002). "Back to the Beanstalk", Starlog Fantasy Worlds, pp. 56–59.
  17. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1351685/ “Jack the Giant Slayer (2013)”
  18. http://www.talkingretail.com/products-news/grocery/weetabix-launches-10m-campaign-jack-beanstalk-ad/ "Weetabix launches £10m campaign with Jack and the Beanstalk ad"
  19. Book: Lenburg . Jeff . The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons . 1999 . Checkmark Books . 0-8160-3831-7 . 142.
  20. Book: Grob . Gijs . Mickey's Movies: The Theatrical Films of Mickey Mouse . 2018 . Theme Park Press . 978-1683901235 . Part Four: Mickey Mouse Superstar.
  21. Book: Lenburg . Jeff . The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons . 1999 . Checkmark Books . 0-8160-3831-7 . 6 June 2020 . 108–109.
  22. http://www.bleedingcool.com/2013/08/21/exclusive-lots-of-details-of-disneys-unannounced-animated-film-giants
  23. News: Kit. Borys. Disney Shelves 'Jack and the Beanstalk' Film 'Gigantic' (Exclusive). October 10, 2017. The Hollywood Reporter. October 10, 2017.
  24. News: Tom and Jerry's Giant Adventure Blu-ray. 2013-04-25 . Blu-ray.com. April 25, 2013.
  25. Web site: Netflix Sets Skydance Animation In Multi-Year Deal, First Up Is Alan Menken Musical 'Spellbound;' Rachel Zegler, Nicole Kidman, Javier Bardem Star. Deadline Hollywood. Fleming. Mike Jr.. October 18, 2023. October 18, 2023.
  26. Web site: Doric Film Festival 2024 - Winners 2024 . 2024-06-26 . Doric Film Festival . en-GB.
  27. Web site: 2024-06-19 . Doric Film Festival recognises north-east talents . 2024-06-26 . Grampian Online . en.
  28. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061830/fullcredits?ref_=tt_ov_st_sm Jack and the Beanstalk (1967 TV Movie), Full Cast & Crew, imdb.com
  29. Web site: Jack and the Beanstalk, 1967, YouTube . https://web.archive.org/web/20200215224953/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwfiKhRz-qw&gl=US&hl=en. 2020-02-15 . dead. YouTube.com . 2018-02-06.
  30. Book: Barbera, Joseph. My Life in "Toons": From Flatbush to Bedrock in Under a Century. 1994. Turner Publishing. Atlanta, GA. 1-57036-042-1. 162–65. registration.
  31. Web site: Animated Hungarian folk tales. . Magyar népmesék (TV Series 1980-2012) . Magyar Televízió Müvelödési Föszerkesztöség (MTV) (I), Pannónia Filmstúdió . 11 January 2021 . 27 November 1980.
  32. Web site: Revolting Rhymes: Two half-hour animated films based on the much-loved rhymes written by Roald Dahl and illustrated by Quentin Blake. BBC Media Centre . 2018-02-26.
  33. News: Cast of Jack and the Beanstalk are ready for panto season . 18 November 2020 . Bournemouth Echo.
  34. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36324641 Jack and the wonder beans (Book, 1996)
  35. https://www.badgerandfoxandfriends.com/what-jill-did-while-jack-climbed-the-beanstalk/ What Jill Did While Jack Climbed the Beanstalk
  36. Web site: Title name translation . SuperFamicom.org . 2011-05-24 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120509215232/http://superfamicom.org/famicom/info/jumpin-kid-jack-to-mame-no-ki-monogatari . 2012-05-09 .
  37. Web site: Game Data . GameFAQs . 2008-04-21.
  38. Web site: Monger . James Christopher . Privateering . AllMusic . 18 November 2020.