The
Little Mermaid Was Dressed in Men’s Clothing!
I was amazed to learn that the Little Mermaid dressed like a man – a fact which Akiko Waki points out in her book “The 19th Century for Girls – From the Little Mermaid to Alice in Wonderland.”
This led me to
open “The
Andersen’s Fairy Tales” from Iwanami Paperbook Libray (translated Suekichi
Ohata). The Little Mermaid fell in love with the Prince and came to the
human world, and there it says, “The Prince had them tailor men’s clothes for
the Mermaid and had her accompany him when he went for an excursion on a horse.
The two of them went through a fragrant forest.”
On the other
hand, according to Waki, the same place in The Collected Works of World
Literature for Children (translated by Hiroto Hirabayashi) version says, “The
Prince made a saddle so that he could ride on a horse with the Mermaid. The two
of them went through a fragrant forest.” In the original Danish version, the
Mermaid is dressed in men’s clothes.
Waki notes the
difference in her book. “The Hirabayashi version means that the Memaid in her
feminine clothes is riding double on a horse with the Prince. In contrast, if
the Prince ‘had them tailor men’s clothes for her,’ it means she was riding on
a different horse and accompanying him like an attendant. This difference
cannot be overlooked.”
Once we have
learned that the Little Mermaid was dressed like a man, a completely different
-- active and hermaphrodite – image of “Mermaid” from the traditional one comes
up. When we focus on the “men’s clothes,” the teary ending of the tale could
possibly be interpreted in another way.
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Original
article written by lita (wan.or.jp/book/?cat=1)
Translated
by A. Tawara
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