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Spinning Straw into Gold: What Fairy Tales Reveal About the Transformations in a Woman's Life
 
 
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Spinning Straw into Gold: What Fairy Tales Reveal About the Transformations in a Woman's Life [Hardcover]

Joan Gould (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 22, 2005
“What’s your favorite fairy tale?” Joan Gould asks in the Introduction to this brilliantly original book about the hidden meanings in fairy tales and what these beloved stories reveal about a woman’s life.

Whether your answer is “Cinderella” (most women’s choice), “Hansel and Gretel,” or another tale, your favorite conveys something significant about you, your experiences, and your soul– something perhaps not obvious to outsiders and possibly not entirely clear to you.

Throughout this illuminating book, Gould delves into the deeper meanings behind fairy tales and myths–helping you to understand not only what your choice of fairy tale may mean for you, but also what you need to be doing during the three main stages of development: maiden, matron, and crone.

“This is a book about women,” Gould writes, “specifically about fairy tales and the way they illuminate the metamorphoses at each stage of a woman’s life: those shifts in consciousness as well as biology that propel women from one level of being to another.” As Gould expertly addresses the transformations many women experience–marriage, childbirth, and widowhood–her keen observations may surprise you, and it is through these revelations, that Gould truly works her magic.

The story of Sleeping Beauty allegorizes the role that waiting plays in the attainment of womanhood; “Rapunzel” illuminates a bride’s ambivalence toward her impending nuptials; “The Seal Wife” acknowledges a mother’s sense of loss of self to the demands of her family. Most poignantly, through the myth of Demeter and Persephone, Gould grapples with the final stage of a woman’s life, the unexpected expansion of a woman’s spirit in old age.

Full of archetypal figures known to us all, this wonderfully perceptive work is also populated with narratives from the lives of ordinary women. These personal stories– of Sleeping Beauties who fell asleep in puberty and awoke ten years later to find themselves married to the wrong man, or the right one–illustrate the rich insights that are to be gained from familiar story figures. Replete with a wealth of wisdom about the private battles and public roles each woman must face in her life, Spinning Straw into Gold explores the choices, demands, and changes a woman must face every day.


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

The virginal princess, the ugly stepsister, the wicked witch: through timeless fairy tales and their contemporary adaptations in films and novels, such caricatures have become deeply embedded in the collective consciousness and have helped shape society's standards for feminine beauty and behavior. Assigning them real-life counterparts, Gould examines how such stereotypes influence a woman's life as she moves from maiden to matron to crone through a comprehensive analysis of these familiar storybook characters. If Snow White, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty represent a young girl's confrontation of parental authority and cultural expectations, then Rapunzel, Jane Eyre, and Scarlett O'Hara symbolize her coming-of-age, and the tales of Hansel and Gretel and Demeter and Persephone explore ways in which elderly women face their final years and eventual death. In an engaging and erudite analysis of how these metamorphoses have been informed by or reflected in our ancient myths and contemporary mores, Gould reevaluates the personas women adopt in real life and in literature. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

Advance Praise for Spinning Straw into Gold

“Open Joan Gould’s lovely book anywhere and you will find something recognizable, as relevant today as when you were a child. That’s the magic of fairy tales. Be wise, be strong, and grab life like the heroes and heroines in Spinning Straw into Gold.”
NANCY FRIDAY, author of My Mother, Myself, and My Secret Garden

“In this ingenious, wonderfully readable work, Joan Gould takes a long look at women’s lives by way of familiar fairy tales and myths–those tried-and-true tales, told over and over through the generations, that subtly incorporate powerful symbols and beliefs about the nature of a woman’s roles and her relationships. This is at once a deep yet thoroughly entertaining and enjoyable book.”
MAGGIE SCARF, author of Secrets, Lies, Betrayals and Intimate Partners

“Just as Joseph Campbell revealed the hero’s adventures, Joan Gould has shown us the heroine and how she must face those tasks, as formidable as any hero’s, in whose accomplishment lies the fulfillment of a woman’s life. Spinning Straw into Gold belongs in the company of the few books that give us what we recognize as true but haven’t the ability to articulate for ourselves. Like the Queen’s magic mirror in the story of Snow White, it shines, and what it says is not only right but essential.”
-—KATHRYN HARRISON, author of The Kiss and The Mother Knot

“Taking the life of a woman through her changes, from maiden to matron to crone–one change empowering the next until the last restores her to the first–Joan Gould has written a passionate song of praise for life itself. Her book is as nourishing as the fairy tales she treats, as tonic as the Homeric ‘Hymn to Demeter,’ with which the line begins, and as awestruck as Robert Graves’s ‘White Goddess,’ with which it might have ended–had Gould not produced her inspired Spinning Straw into Gold to rejuvenate us all.”
ROBERT FAGLES, translator of The Iliad and The Odyssey

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; First Edition edition (February 22, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0394585321
  • ISBN-13: 978-0394585321
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,604,396 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Maiden, Mother, Crone, May 24, 2005
This review is from: Spinning Straw into Gold: What Fairy Tales Reveal About the Transformations in a Woman's Life (Hardcover)
For the record, my answer to Joan Gould's first question--"What's your favorite fairy tale?"--is "Beauty and the Beast".

This question begins a beautiful, lyrical exploration of many fairy tales, both famous and obscure, and how they relate to the different stages of women's lives. In the Sleeping Beauty chapter, for example, she delves into the psyche of a young woman just awakening into sexuality; for Beauty and the Beast she explores a woman's experience with courtship and the beginning of marriage, and for the tale of Demeter she talks about being an older woman, watching one's child choose her own path. These are just a few examples. For every tale Gould draws parallels to other, more modern novels and movies that contain fairy-tale archetypes, like Jane Eyre, Pretty Woman, The Story of O, Harry Potter, and Wuthering Heights. I saw myself reflected over and over in these pages, both in the chapter that best fit my current circumstances and in all those that preceded it. I concur with the reviewer who says she wished she'd had this book when she was 18. It just "clicks" so well with things I'd experienced but not known how to name, and ties them in with the stories I've always loved, revealing to me just why those stories never lose their resonance with me.

My only quibble is that Gould focuses more on the biological aspects of womanhood--menstruation, sex, childbirth, menopause--than on other sorts of choices women make, like career and creativity. She does mention these things, but they are not given as much emphasis.
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Women who love Joseph Cambell or Jung will love this book!, March 13, 2005
This review is from: Spinning Straw into Gold: What Fairy Tales Reveal About the Transformations in a Woman's Life (Hardcover)
We have always known that fairy tales speak to our souls. If you want to know why, you will find this book fascinating. Think of a combination of Joseph Campbell and Carl Jung and you have Spinning Straw into Gold. It is amazing how these stories speak to us across centuries. And it is also fascinating to see how differently - and richly -- they are interpreted in this book. Most of what I knew was in the Disney versions, and I have seen here there is a lot more to explore! So reach over the oceans, back over time, into our collective unconscious to see what messages there are for you. I highly recommend the journey!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Friendly Word of Caution, July 17, 2011
I found the authors writing to be poetic and the content verbally well formed. From this perspective it was a good book.

What I found disconcerting was that this writer seems fixated on the female biology rather then the MANY things that make a women a whole person. These fairy tales were written long ago when society viewed women as little more then objects. I feel that the author is very good at continuing this line of thought. If one were not to know any intelligent women you might think, after reading this book, that the only persute that a women had in life was to get a mate and procreate, and that the best moments in a womens life are experianced on her back and that she pines for this day and night. This books off balanced aproach to the MANY aspects of being human degrades the person to less then human. The books constent ability to make almost ALL things sexual or to sexualize them became cheap and overly easy. In the end I walked away feeling little more then an unthinking chimp in the zoo because of the lack of its ability to validate that a womens content is far more then just her sexuality.

If you are confused are unsure about your physiology or biology and why you behave in certain ways, and would like it explained through fairy tales then this is the book for you. If you want to be validated as a whole person that is more then just a biological hormonal sex object then this book could prove to be upsetting. I personally was not ready to have womenhood degraded to only such narrow aspects but, maybe others might find it entertaining to explore there body chemistry through fairy tales.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The youngest heroine in this book, at least the youngest emotionally, is a girl who hasn't yet completed her first transformation of consciousness: puberty, which eventually produces an independent sexual woman from a dependent child. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
gray bedgown, seal wife, grain goddess, golden gown, classic fairy tales
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Snow White, Black Bride, White Bride, Sleeping Beauty, Jane Eyre, Ash Girl, Walt Disney, Terrible Mother, Charles Perrault, Pretty Woman, Edward Rochester, New York, Eleanor Roosevelt, World War, Bloody Chamber, Eliza Doolittle, Scarlett O'Hara, Briar Rose, Doris Lessing, Miss Celie, Professor Higgins, Queen of the Dead, Rhett Butler, Ashley Wilkes, Beauty's Beast
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