Hansel and Gretel Essays

  • Hansel And Gretel

    1453 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hansel and Gretel Deep, deep, into a far away forest lived a poor man with his wife and two children. His daughter’s name was Gretel and his son’s name was Hansel. Hansel and Gretel had a wicked stepmother that did not like the children and wanted to get rid of them. The stepmother was very selfish and did not care about the well being of the children at all. The family was running short on food and the man worried about what the family would eat to survive. The father was a craftsman and did

  • Analysis Of Hansel And Gretel

    756 Words  | 2 Pages

    horror, romance, and fantasy. Hansel and Gretel Hansel and Gretel is a tale in which good triumphs over evil. Recorded and published by the Brothers Grimm, the plot focuses on an unfortunate brother and sister from a poverty stricken home. After being abandoned in the woods by their father, they stumble upon a house made of confectionary. However this house belongs to a cannibalistic witch, of whom captures the children and plans to eat them. Her plan is foiled when Gretel incinerates the witch, tricking

  • Analysis Of Hansel And Gretel

    1255 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Milchwald, filmmaker Christoph Hochhäusler presents a modern German version of the Brothers Grimm’s classic “Hansel and Gretel.” Although these two tales are not identical, they share enough similarities to convey the same theme. By comparing and contrasting the plot, setting, and characters in Milchwald and “Hansel and Gretel”, one can see how Hochhäusler cinematically engages with his textual source to convey a theme of uncertainty and ultimately develops a compelling story for contemporary

  • Hansel And Gretel Death

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    In life, people grow with adversity rather than at ease. Trying situations provide challenges and ordeals which make people stronger. In Hansel and Gretel by Tommy Wirkola, “the Hero engages in the Ordeal, the central life-or-death crisis, during which he faces his greatest fear, confronts this most difficult challenge, and experiences “death”.” The story is pushed to the climax when the plot enters the underworld stage at the darkest hour of the movie. This underworld defines ordeals at a period

  • Hansel And Gretel Sparknotes

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    When I read the three packets for homework; Hansel and Gretel stood out to me the most. This was a story I remember reading when I was younger; but did not remember the true meaning behind the story. I do remember the basic plot of the story being about Hansel and Gretel trying to find their way back home from the trail of crumbs they had left. I also remember that the birds ended up eating all of the crumbs; so the two children wandered off further into the woods to find a house made of bread, cake

  • Essay On Hansel And Gretel

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hansel & Gretel Throughout Time The infamous Germanic fairy tale does not begin and end solely from the pen of the Brothers Grimm. Similar to the statement “every joke, has a little bit of truth” holds true to this fairy tale which has deep ties to the Middle Ages time period. It is believed that these tales of poverty, child abandonment, starvation, and cannibalism can be traced back to the Middle Ages when people authentically experienced these difficult situations. The story of Hansel and Gretel

  • Freud and Hansel and Gretel

    1624 Words  | 4 Pages

    Description for Characters 2) Hansel - Hansel is a 14 year old Caucasian male and his ethnicity is German. He has had no formal education, but learned what he could from his father and mother while they were both alive. He is very skinny and has an average health at the beginning of the story. His social status is fairly low as a person within the forest; this is because he is poor, has a lack of resources and was not born as a female witch. Hansel on a daily basis attempts to help his father gather

  • Socialism In Hansel And Gretel

    1498 Words  | 3 Pages

    The stepmother of Hansel and Gretel is the seen as an evil and tempered character who persuades the father to break up the family by forcing the children out of the house when a famine hits the countryside. The role which the stepmother plays, “aligns her with a number of stereotypes

  • Hansel And Gretel Research Paper

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hansel & Gretel After a month of being in jail, the case of “Hansel and Gretel” is brought to court. I have finally the opportunity to bring my testimony and prove to the judge and everyone that I’m not the person that people think I’m. Good morning ladies and gentlemen in this courtroom. My name is Mirsella Witchwood, as probably you all know me as the witch that wants to eat little kids. That is not who I really am. First of all, I’d like to let the court know that I never wanted to be a witch

  • A Different Tale of Hansel and Gretel

    2472 Words  | 5 Pages

    patting his daughter. Gretel wiped away the tears in her eyes. She told herself that she should stay strong, at least for her father. The maid ran out of the room, her hands covered in blood and an apparent worry glooming like the storm clouds outside. She whispered something barely audible and her father rushed in. He came out carrying a child in his arms but tears were dripping out of his eyes. Father handed her Hansel as he tried to tell her what happened. Gretel understood and accepted it

  • Hansel & Gretel: A tale of Many Stories

    1245 Words  | 3 Pages

    include violence, but always with the aim to provide a moral to the story. Hansel and Gretel is in itself a very interesting story to analyze. It demonstrates the way that children should not stray too far from their benchmarks and rely on appearances. In 2013, a film adaptation was produced. This film is produced for an older public and has picked up the story to turn it into a more mature and violent version. Hansel and Gretel is a German fairy tale written by the Grimm Brothers which has undergone

  • Twisted Fairytale: The Story of Hansel and Gretel

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    We all know the story of Hansel and Gretel. Two innocent little children who were walking in the woods and found a house made of candy. There was an ugly old witch inside who tried to bake them into a pie. Well that is only one side of the story. I am here to tell you what really happened. Let’s get one thing straight here; I was not an ugly old witch. My name was Bertha. Also it really hurt my feeling and increased my insecurities when it said I was an ugly old witch. I thought I was a beautiful

  • The Dynamic and Ever-changing Hansel and Gretel

    1797 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Dynamic and Ever-changing Hansel and Gretel Most fairy-tale aficionados have a static view of their favorite stories. That is, indeed, part of the glory which these tales hold…the fact that they are timeless, forever remaining fond memories of unforgettable stories that had been repeated to them from a young age. In both the oral and written traditions, these stories perpetuated themselves and became fixtures upon the cultures of which they have taken hold. For most people, the idea of

  • Poverty and Wealth in Cinderella and Hansel and Gretel

    2919 Words  | 6 Pages

    How did the cultural and socioeconomic status of the Grimm brothers as well as the conditions in 1800 Germany influence the theme of poverty and wealth in “Cinderella” and “Hansel and Gretel” There have been several scholarly debates that the Grimm brothers were among the pioneering contributors of the kind of German nationalism whose tragic consequences engulfed the twentieth century. Disregarding questions over the validity of this statement, what remains evident is the invaluable influence

  • Analysis of "The True Story of Hansel and Gretel"

    852 Words  | 2 Pages

    It was said by an anonymous author, that war changes the inherently good and unique spirit of the human race into the brute savages that they once had been. In The True Story of Hansel and Gretel characters have never known freedom from this war torn Europe. Bloodshed and violence are all that these characters have lived with and therefore we see no other traits other than those that are a direct result of these unfortunate and gruesome circumstances. Throughout this book, the actions of Major

  • Epilogue About The Relationship Between Hansel And Gretel

    671 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hansel and Gretel Were you ever planning to eat something, then that something , or someone, ate your house, beat you up, and threw you in a cauldron? Well, that's exactly what happened to me. So let me tell you the story of a girl and a boy. It all started on a windy, dark day … “I can’t believe you ate all the schnitzel” yelled Hansel to his sister, Gretel. “Well, you ate all the strudel” yelled Gretel to Hansel, “Now we have no food and no home.” “Dad was madder than a boiling cauldron.” The

  • Literary Analysis of The True Story of Hansel and Gretel

    1213 Words  | 3 Pages

    Set in Poland during the German occupation, “The True Story of Hansel and Gretel” is told as a fairy tale, utilizing many of the elements that are common to fairy tales. This book reflects the Grimm brothers’ fairy tale, “Hansel and Gretel.” However, in Murphy’s parable, Hansel and Gretel are two Jewish children who are abandoned by their father and stepmother in order to save them from the Nazis. Setting the tale in Nazi Germany creates an atmosphere of fear and anxiety, and establishes a set

  • Poem, Gretel in the Darkness by Luise Gluck Taken from Classic Hansel and Gretel

    556 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the poem “Gretel in Darkness”, the author Louise Gluck writes based off of the classic Brothers Grimm fairytale “Hansel and Gretel”. Gluck visualizes herself as Gretel, seeing and feeling from her point of view after being faced with her terrible encounter with the witch. Gretel is distraught and feels as though no one is there for her or cares about what she is feeling. She is overwhelmed with this certain sensation of darkness. Darkness is a word filled with a strong meaning. It represents the

  • Hansel And Gretel Essay

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    Can the choices that a person makes during war time be justified? During wartime, people are faced with extremely difficult and life threatening situations. In Louise Murphy’s novel The True Story of Hansel and Gretel, Murphy illuminates how people make choices and sacrifices based on the survival of themselves and their families. During war people have to make sacrifices to save the lives of themselves and their loved ones. Throughout the Nazi occupation of Poland during WWII, many people

  • Hansel And Gretel Research Paper

    1338 Words  | 3 Pages

    specifically and generalize their displayed habits in a “criminal profile” (Krueger 32). The witch within “Hansel and Gretel” could arguably be defined as a serial killer under these constraints. Within her ritual-esque taking in, torturing, and plan to consume young children, a “signature” is seemingly developed.