East of the Sun and West of the Moon: A Norwegian Folktale

· ·
· Blackdown Publications
4.0
1 review
Ebook
41
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

“A great white bear waits outside, and he has promised to make us rich if he can only have our youngest daughter.”

Often called the Scandinavian Beauty and the Beast, this Norwegian folktale follows the journey of the youngest daughter of a peasant, who—for the sake of her poor but large family—agrees to leave everything she has ever known and accompany a White Bear to his mountain castle. After discovering the White Bear’s true identity, she seeks to rescue him from a forced marriage to a Troll Princess. Her search leads her to the homes of the Four Winds, who may be her only hope in locating where her beloved now resides—in a castle which lies East of the Sun and West of the Moon...

This book also contains King Valemon, the White Bear, another Search for the Lost Husband variant from Asbjørnsen and Moe’s collection of Norwegian Folktales.

[Folklore Type: ATU-425A: The Search for the Lost HusbandThe Animal as Bridegroom]

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About the author

Peter Christen Asbjørnsen (1812-1885) & Jørgen Engebretsen Moe (1813-1882) were collectors of Norwegian folklore who published Norske folke-eventyr (1841-44; “Norwegian Folktales”), a landmark in Norwegian literature that influenced the Norwegian language.

Asbjørnsen, the son of a glazier, and Moe, the son of a rich and highly educated farmer, met as teenagers in 1826, while they were both attending school in the former parish of Norderhov in southern Norway, and became lifelong friends. Independently, both men began collecting folklore and folktales that had survived and developed from Old Norse pagan mythology in the mountain and fjord dialects of Norway, which they decided to pool together and publish jointly.

At the time, the Norwegian literary was influenced heavily by Danish norms, which was unsuitable for national folklore, while the various dialects used by Norway’s oral storytellers were too local. They solved the problem by applying the principles espoused by the Brothers Grimm of using a simple linguistic style in place of dialects, while maintaining the national uniqueness of the folktales.

Some of the tales appeared as early as 1837 and others were published as Norske folke-eventyr. Asbjørnsen’s vivid prose and Moe’s poems recaptured the folk heritage of Norway for the modern age, and by gathering the tales of ghosts and fairies, gods and mountain trolls, they stimulated a revival of interest in Norway’s past and further research into folktales and ballads, as well as reawakening a sense of national identity.

Separately, Asbjørnsen published his collection of fairytales entitled Norske huldreeventyr og folkesagn (1845-48; “Norwegian Fairy Tales and Folk Legends”), and Moe published his collection of children’s stories, I brønden og i tjærnet (1851; “In the Well and the Pond”).

Asbjørnsen became a zoologist by profession, and in 1856 he studied methods of timber preservation, and later translated Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species (1860). Moe graduated with a degree in theology, and though his Digte (1850; “Poems”) placed him among the Norwegian Romantic poets, he was ordained in 1853 after experiencing a religious crisis, and became Bishop of the Diocese of Kristiansand in 1874.


Rachel Louise Lawrence is a British author who translates and adapts folk and fairy tales from original texts and puts them back into print, particularly the lesser-known British & Celtic variants.

Since writing her first story at the age of six, Rachel has never lost her love of writing and reading. A keen wildlife photographer and gardener, she is currently working on several writing projects.

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Or visit her website: www.rachellouiselawrence.com

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