"The Magic Land of Charles Perrault". A journey through the fairy tales of charles perrault II

"The Magic Land of Charles Perrault". A journey through the fairy tales of charles perrault II

This section is dedicated to the writer Charles Perrault and his fairy tales for children.

Charles Perrault's fairy tales read

Charles Perrault's life story

Charles Perrault was born in Paris in 1628 into a large family and was the youngest son. His family was already well known at that time. Charles's father worked in parliament and was an eminent lawyer, the three older brothers also showed themselves, some in jurisprudence and some in architecture. At the age of 9, Charles Perrault was sent to college. All the time he studied, he was an exemplary student both in behavior and in grades, but still the college in which he studied, he dropped out and took up self-education. Charles Perrault's soul did not lie in the right, and although he worked as a lawyer, this practice did not last long. Charles turned to his brother for help and he arranged for him to be his secretary, but Pierrot had already written several works by that time and, hovering in the clouds, did not stay with his brother for a long time. Fortunately, those poems that he published in 1659 brought him success. Career began to strive uphill, Charles was even admitted to Louis 14 with his poems.

In 1663 it happened that Charles was hired by the Minister of Finance for the same post of secretary. After 8 years, Perrault was already at the French Academy of the Royal Palace. Charles was interested in cultural social life, he continued to write actively and for a long time. Soon, the future famous writer met the girl Marie and married her. Marie bore him three sons, but she died during the last birth. It was a deep shock for Charles, he never married again, and raised and raised his sons himself.

1683 was a landmark and turning point for Charles Perrault. This year, he quit his job, he was assigned an excellent pension, on which he could live comfortably until the end of his days.

Having received so much free time, Perrault began to write. This period can be called the heyday of his work. His works are poems in verse and short stories. And one day he got the idea to present some folk tales in literary language, in such a way that they would attract adults, including, and not just children. The Sleeping Beauty was the first to appear, and already in 1697 his collection of fairy tales, "The Tales of Mother Goose", was published. All fairy tales are folk, except for one, Rike - Khokholok, this he wrote himself. The rest were simply written down by him, but at the same time they brought unprecedented fame to the writer himself and the popularity of the genre of fairy tales in general. Charles Perrault's fairy tales are pleasant and simple to read, because they are written in excellent literary language, which raised the level of perception of the fairy tale to a higher level.

Interesting fact: Charles Perrault's fairy tales were published under the name of his son and for a long time there were disputes about authorship, but the most likely still remains the usual state of affairs for us.

Charles Perrault's creativity

Charles Perrault is known to us as a storyteller, but during his life he was better known as a poet, academician of the French Academy (at that time it was very honorable). Even the scientific works of Charles were published.

In part, Charles Perrault was lucky to start writing at a time when fairy tales were becoming a popular genre. Many sought to record folk art in order to preserve it, transport it into written form and thereby make it accessible to many. Please note that in those days such a concept in literature as a fairy tale for children did not exist at all. Basically, these were stories of grandmothers, nannies, and someone understood a fairy tale as philosophical reflections.

It was Charles Perrault who wrote down several fairy-tale plots so that they were eventually transferred to the genres of high literature. Only this author was able to write serious reflections in simple language, give humorous notes and put into the work all the talent of a true master-writer. As mentioned earlier, Charles Perrault published the collection of fairy tales under the name of his son. The explanation for this is simple: if the academician of the French Academy Perrault published a collection of fairy tales, he could be considered frivolous and frivolous, and he could lose a lot.

Charles' amazing life brought him fame as a lawyer, poet-writer and storyteller. This man was talented in everything.


Many famous fairy tales do not end happily in the original. The fact is that the brothers Grimm, Charles Perrault and many other famous storytellers wrote their works for adults, so the plots of unadapted versions of Cinderella, Three Little Pigs and many other good children's fairy tales could successfully become a script for modern horror movies.


The very first version of "The Sleeping Beauty" by the Italian Giambattista Basile is much less joyful than everyone is used to thinking. The king finds a girl who has fallen asleep forever and rapes her. After 9 months, the girl gives birth to twins in a dream. The beauty wakes up from the fact that one of the kids sucked a splinter from her finger, because of which the girl fell asleep. The King later kills his wife to be with Sleeping Beauty.

2. Pinocchio


In the original version of the tale by Carlo Collodi, when Gepetto carved Pinocchio from wood, the puppet fled from him. The police put the old man Gepetto in jail, believing that he offended the wooden boy. Pinocchio returns to Gepetto's house and kills the wise century-old cricket, not wanting to listen to his advice. Pinocchio ends his life on fire.

3. Three little pigs



In some versions of this English tale, the wolf eats two piglets after it destroys their flimsy thatched and wooden dwellings.

4. The Little Mermaid


In the original storyline of Hans Christian Andersen, the little mermaid who regained her legs was in excruciating pain with every step. At the same time, she was given a condition: if the prince marries someone else, she will die and turn into sea foam (in the end, the prince did marry another). In an attempt to save their sister, the other mermaids spoke to the sea witch's dagger. The spell assumed that if the Little Mermaid kills the prince with this dagger and drops his blood on his feet, she will get rid of the pain by returning to the sea again. True, love won and the prince survived.

5. The Ugly Duckling


The tale of Hans Christian Andersen "The Ugly Duckling" is known all over the world. According to the plot of the tale, which differs somewhat from the cartoon plot, the duckling originally lived in a barnyard, where other animals pursued him. He escaped and lived with wild geese and ducks, which were soon killed by hunters. The duckling was picked up by the old woman, but her cat and chicken also began to mock the chicken. After lengthy hardships, he escaped in the winter and joined the swans.

6. The Toad Prince


In some versions of the tale, the frog was not turned into a prince by the kiss of a good princess. The toad turned into a human after being beheaded. In the original version of the Brothers Grimm, the princess, in order to turn the frog into a prince, slammed it against the wall. The frog turns into a princess only in the Russian folk version of the tale.

7. Cinderella


In the Brothers Grimm version, Cinderella's older sister cuts off her toes in an attempt to put on a slipper. The second sister cuts off her heels. In both cases, two doves sent by Cinderella's dead mother warned the prince about the blood of the sisters in slippers. As a result, Cinderella was successfully recognized as the real owner of the shoes, and during her wedding with the prince, the pigeons returned and pecked out the eyes of her older sisters.

8. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs


The real fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm is very dark. The evil queen ordered the gamekeepers to take Snow White into the forest, kill her, cut out her liver and lungs, so that they could cook dinner for the queen. Later, the prince and Snow White got married and invited all the rulers to their wedding. When the evil queen appeared at the wedding, not suspecting that the bride was her stepdaughter, she was forced to put on iron boots red-hot in the fireplace and dance until she died.

9. Pied Piper


Pied Piper from Hameln - a story about missing children. According to the plot of the tale, the piper succumbed to the persuasion of the mayor and agreed to rid the city of rats and lured the rats into the river, where they drowned. But the mayor refused to pay the promised reward, and the piper, with the help of witchcraft, took all the children out of the city.

10. Little Red Riding Hood


In the original version of Little Red Riding Hood, a wolf came to grandma's house and tore her to pieces, cooked food out of the flesh and drained the blood into a bottle of wine. When Little Red Riding Hood arrived, the wolf fed her with bloody treats, after which he persuaded the girl to undress, burn her clothes and go to bed next to him. As a result, Little Red Riding Hood was eaten.

January 12 - 385 years since the birth of Charles Perrault

How I would like

Live in a magical house

Where fairy tales are kept

Like poetry in an album

Where is the fire in the fireplace

Creates coziness

And on the bookshelf

Miracles live.

Where in the old armchair,

Slightly creaking with a pen,

Composes fairy tales

My friend is Charles Perrault.

Telling fairy tales to his children, he really wanted the children to grasp the main thing: good must certainly triumph, and if you save someone in trouble, then you will certainly be helped. The children asked him if he had invented these tales himself. And he explained that these tales were invented a long time ago, by another father or another mother for their children. Perhaps at this time the storyteller began to wake up in Charles Perrault.

Charles Perrault was born in Paris on January 12, 1628, that is, around the time when the young d, Artagnan, who came to the French capital for fame and money, performed his first exploits. Charles Perrault was licensed to practice law, but this work made him bored, and Perrault mainly engaged in literature and art, eventually becoming a famous poet, critic and even a member of the French Academy. He moved in the courtyard and was close to many important dignitaries. These acquaintances may have influenced his decision not to put his name on the cover of the collection "Tales of Mother Goose", which he published in 1697. The collection was published on behalf of Perrot's 19-year-old son Pierre d, Armankourt. Why did he do it? Obviously, in order not to become a laughingstock: a serious person, academician, writer, and indulges in fairy tales! According to another version, he did this because he heard these tales from the nurse of his son, and thus wanted to preserve historical justice.

Stories about sleeping beauties, little and remote sons, kind stepdaughters and evil stepmothers were told for centuries before Perrault. They told everything in their own way. The Fairy Tales of Mother Goose were also special. Reading them, you have no doubt that these are the tales of France, moreover, France of the time of Louis XIV. So, the Boy with a Thumb, having defeated the cannibal, gets a job as a courier at the royal court; Cinderella's sisters, going to the ball, dress up exactly like the ladies of the court of Louis - the Sun, and in The Sleeping Beauty everyone falls asleep except the king, because a country without a king could not be imagined even in a fairy tale.


The collection includes 9 fairy tales, 8 were literary adaptations, and Charles Perrault himself wrote the fairy tale "Riquet the Crest". Remember the heroes of these fairy tales: Cinderella, Bluebeard, Puss in Boots, Little Red Riding Hood and others. How bored we would be in childhood if these fairy tales were not there!

It was Charles Perrault who managed to turn the fairy tale into a "high genre" of literature. His fairy tales opened up a real "fairy movement". They had successors and imitators. And not only books. The sleeping beauty danced in ballet. Cinderella sang at the opera. And how many of Perrault's characters spoke from the screen ?!


It turns out that the storyteller was right when he wrote "That these trinkets are not trinkets at all" and "deserve to be retold" !!!

I suggest questions for conversations with readers:

  1. What fairy tales by Charles Perrault do you know?
  2. Which of these fairy tales seems to you the most beautiful?
  3. Which fairy tale seems scary to you?
  4. Which of the characters in Ch. Perrault's tales do you consider the most daring?
  5. ... the kindest?
  6. ... the most resourceful?
  7. What magical objects from the fairy tales of Ch. Perrault would you put in the "Fairy Tale Museum?"
  8. Have you come across incomprehensible words in Charles Perrault's fairy tales? If so, which ones?
  9. Name Perrault's tales, in which magical transformations took place.
  10. Reading Perrault's tales, you understand that events took place a long time ago. How did you define it? (according to the speech of the heroes, according to their manners, that is, how they behave, according to their clothes, or ...)



























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Lesson objectives:

  • recall the biography and work of Charles Perrault;
  • to expand the understanding of fairy tales;
  • to increase the creative interest of children;
  • develop moral character traits.

Equipment:

  • presentation;
  • multimedia projector;
  • cards with the names of fairy tales.

Event progress

I. Organizational moment.

How I would like
Live in a magical house
Where fairy tales are kept
Like poetry in an album
Where the old ladies are the walls
Gossip at night
About everything in fairy tales
seen with their own eyes

Where is the fire in the fireplace
Creates coziness
And on the bookshelf
Miracles live
Where in the old armchair,
Slightly creaking with a pen,
Composes fairy tales
My friend - Charles Perrault

Our today's meeting is dedicated to the wonderful French storyteller Charles Perrault.

II. Biography of Charles Perrault.

So, a long time ago, in one country (it is called France) there were five brothers. They were so similar to each other that they even wrote in the same handwriting. The elder brother's name was Jean Perrault, and he became a lawyer. Pierre Perrault became the main tax collector. Claude trained to be a doctor. Nicola Perrault became a learned theologian and mathematician. And the youngest - Charles Perrault - devoted himself to state affairs. Member of the French Academy, physicist, anatomist, linguist ...
But the public services of Charles Perrault were soon forgotten, because something completely different was remembered - the tales of the Secretary General. And they were remembered so firmly that after many years people love, appreciate and read these tales with pleasure again and again.

Charles Perrault came up with extraordinary stories and incredible adventures, in which good fairies, and evil witches, and beautiful princesses, and simple good-natured girls took part. And now, for many, many years, these heroines have been familiar to people all over the world. People appreciate and love the tales of this kind and inspired artist. And how not to love, how not to appreciate them, if in them, simple and clear in their plot, one can feel the soul of the great master of the word. His fairy tales teach to appreciate the true beauty of life, to love work, goodness, courage, justice.

I think you, too, know and love the fairy tales of Charles Perrault since childhood. And today we will once again visit the magical world of his tales, find out which of you is an expert on his tales. And a fabulous quiz will help to do this, the participants of which will be the teams of primary classes.

III. Creativity of Charles Perrault.

Let's remember what tales Charles Perrault wrote:

IV. Travel through fairy tales.

WARM UP

The game involves 6 teams. Each team player (except for the captain) answers a question about a fairy tale. If you answered correctly - 2 points. If the team helped 1 point.

Fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood"

  • What did Little Red Riding Hood collect on the way to her grandmother? (flowers)
  • What was in her basket? (pie and butter pot)
  • Where was Red Riding Hood's grandmother's house? (behind the forest, behind the mill)
  • Who attempted to kill grandmother? (Wolf)
  • Who saved Grandma and Little Red Riding Hood? (lumberjacks)
  • How many questions did Little Red Riding Hood ask the disguised wolf? (4)
  • Fairy tale "Cinderella"

  • What material is Cinderella's shoe made of? (from crystal)
  • Who did the rat turn into in the fairy tale "Cinderella"? (to the coachman)
  • Why was Cinderella called Cinderella? (sat in the corner on a box with ash)
  • How did Cinderella go to the palace for the ball? (on a carriage)
  • How many mice did the carriage take? (5)
  • What has become of Cinderella's old dress? (in a ball gown)
  • Tale "Puss in Boots"

    1. What inheritance did the miller leave to his sons? (mill, donkey, cat)
    2. What did the cat in boots call his owner? ( Marquis de Carabas)
    3. What was the first gift a cat presented to a king on behalf of its owner? (a rabbit)
    4. How many times has the cannibal made his transformations? (2)
    5. Who actually owned the meadows, fields, mill, garden? (to the cannibal)
    6. How did the cat eat the man-eating giant? (asked him to turn into a mouse)

    The Sleeping Beauty fairy tale

  • What did the old fairy predict for the princess? (death by spindle)
  • What did the fairy do so that in 100 years the princess does not feel lonely? (the fairy put everyone in the palace to sleep, but except for the king and queen)
  • How old was the princess when she fell asleep? (16)
  • Who woke up right after the princess? (dog Puff)
  • Why did the castle seem impregnable? (a dense forest has grown around)
  • What decree did the king issue to his subjects? (prohibit, on pain of death, spinning and keeping spindles and spinning wheels in the house)
  • Fairy tale "Boy-with-finger"

  • Why did Thumbnail's parents decide to get rid of the kids? (there was a terrible famine, there was nothing to feed them)
  • How many children did the woodcutter have? (7)
  • How did the children manage to return home the first time? ( they found their way through the pebbles that the boy-with-finger threw on the road)
  • How did Thumbnail Boy want to bring his brothers out a second time? (with bread crumbs)
  • Whose house did Little Thumb and his brothers come across? (Ogre's house)
  • What did Thumb Boy take from the Ogre? (running boots, bag of gold)
  • Captains competition: fairy tale "Fairy gifts"(If the captain answers the question, he brings the team 1 point, if he does not know the answer, then the captain of the other team answers and earns her 1 point)

    1. How did the younger sister differ from the older one? (she was kind and beautiful)
    2. Where did the younger sister have to go 2 times a day? (to the source for water)
    3. Whom did the kind girl meet? (to the fairy)
    4. What was pouring from the lips of the youngest daughter when she began to speak? (flower or gem)
    5. What was pouring from the mouth of the eldest daughter? (snake or toad)
    6. Who met a beautiful girl more often? (young prince)

    STATION TRAVEL

    (After reading the assignment, the teams raise a card with the desired fairy tale. If it is correct, they receive 1 point. The last team receives 0.5 points.)

    Slide 14, 15, 16, 17

    Guess station.

    1) know this rogue
    No one to outwit:
    A cannibal like a mouse
    Managed to swallow.
    (Puss in Boots)

    2. This tale is not new,
    The princess slept in it,
    Fairies wicked then guilt
    And a spindle prick.
    (Sleeping Beauty)

    3.Life has not endowed him with beauty,
    But she rewarded me with her mind beyond measure.
    The mind helped him to become happy.
    Who can guess his name?
    (To Rike with a tuft)

    4.All his wives suffered an evil fate -
    He took their lives ...
    What a villain! Who is he?
    Say the name soon!
    (Blue Beard)

    Slide 18, 19, 20, 21, 22.

    Lost and found. From which fairy tales are objects lost?

    1. Cinderella
    2. sleeping Beauty
    3. Thumb Boy
    4. Fairy gifts
    5. Puss in Boots

    Compositor

    • Pearls, roses, well, politeness, rudeness, toads, frogs (Fairy gifts)
    • Silly beauty, clever prince, fairy, portrait (Rike with a tuft)
    • Ring, chest, skin, king, pie, donkey (Donkey skin)
    • Brothers, forest, cannibal, white pebbles, golden wreaths (Thumb boy)

    Slide 24, 25, 26.

    Station Musical

    Little Red Riding Hood's song from the movie "Little Red Riding Hood".
    Sergei Prokofiev Waltz from the ballet Cinderella.
    P.I. Tchaikovsky music for the ballet The Sleeping Beauty.

    North-Kazakhstan region

    Taiynshinsky district

    village Mironovka

    MSI "Mironovskaya secondary school"

    Social teacher Igibaeva Zh.A.

    Travel game scenario
    Based on the work of the French writer of the hero of the day in 2013 - Charles Perrault.
    "Along fairy trails" for students in grades 2-4.

    Goals:

    1. To increase the creative interest of children.
    2. Teach a thoughtful reading of a literary text; the ability to build your own judgments.
    3. Develop observation, the ability to compare the plots of famous fairy tales
    4. To bring up in children the ability to see and feel the beauty.

    Before the start of the game, students and teachers gather in the assembly hall, where they receive route sheets, according to which the children will have to visit various fairy-tale stations and complete various tasks. The guys will visit 7 stations, and after that they will return to the assembly hall, where the results of the game will be summed up. Before the start, each team receives an envelope with letters from which it is necessary to add a word and find out the name of their team. At the stations, students receive 1 point for each correct answer. Preliminary preparation for the holiday consists in children reading the fairy tales of Charles Perrault.

    1. Station "Portraits" ... Guess the character of the fairy tale by the description.

    1. You are the favorite of your mother and grandmother. You like to pick flowers and collect bouquets. You forget not to talk to strangers. Who will save you from death? (Answer: woodcutters.)

    2. Who knew how to turn into any beast? (Answer: giant ogre.)

    3. You are the youngest son in the family, very smart and reasonable. You have saved the lives of yourself and your brothers more than once. Who will you serve with the king? (Answer: a messenger.)

    4. You are a fairy. Your goddaughter really wants to go to the ball, so you have to conjure. What transformations will you make? (Answer: pumpkin - into a carriage, mice - into horses, lizards - into lackeys, a rat - into coachmen.)

    5. Who lived in the castle, located in an impenetrable thicket of trees and bushes? It was rumored that it belongs to a cannibal ... (Answer: Sleeping Beauty.)



    2. Station "Mathematical".

    1. How many horses were harnessed to Cinderella's carriage? (Answer: 6.)

    2. How many days did the ball in the fairy tale "Cinderella" last? (Answer: 2 days.)

    3. How many fairies were there at the princess's birthday party? (Answer: 8.)

    4. How many brothers did Little Boy have? (Answer: 6.)

    5. How old was the Little Boy? (Answer: 7.)

    6. How many sons did the miller have? (3).

    7. How many times has the Cannibal made his transformations? (2, lion, mouse)

    8. How many years did the enchanted princess have to sleep? (100 years)

    9. How old was the princess when she fell asleep? (16)

    10. How many cases and devices made of pure gold have you ordered for sorceresses? (7).

    3 . Station "Lost and found". Name unnecessary and explain your decision.

    1. Windmill, wolf, cat, girl. (Answer: there is no cat in the fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood".)

    2. Slipper, watch, mouse, eater. (Answer: the cannibal is not in the Cinderella fairy tale.)

    3. Carriage, courtiers, peasants, merchants. (Answer: there are no merchants in the tale "Puss in Boots".)

    4. Yarn, spinning wheel, loom, spindle. (Answer: The loom is not in the Sleeping Beauty tale.)

    5. Sleeping Beauty, Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, Fairies. (Answer: only three fairy tales belong to Ch. Perrault, too much - the fairy tale "Beauty and the Beast".)



    4. Station "Changeling" Guess what kind of fairy tales hid behind the shape-shifters.

    1. "Black Beret" ("Little Red Riding Hood")

    2. "Dog in Sneakers" ("Puss in Boots")

    3. "Pierre without a bang" ("Riquet-crest")

    4. "Red mustache" ("Blue beard")

    5. "Giantess Girl" ("Thumb Boy")

    6. "The Waking Witch" ("Sleeping Beauty")



    5. Station "Why and why?"

    1. Why didn't the wolf eat Little Red Riding Hood right in the forest? (Answer: I heard the clatter of woodcutters' axes.)

    2. Why did the miller's youngest son believe Kot? (Answer: he indulged in tricks, hunting rats and mice, which means he was dexterous and quick-witted.)

    3. Why did Cat need boots? (Answer: to make it easier to wander through the forest.)

    4. Why wasn't the old fairy invited to the party? (Answer: for more than 50 years she did not leave her tower, and everyone thought that she had died long ago.)

    5. Why did the young fairy hide behind the curtain of the bed in the nursery? (Answer: so that her wish is the last and she can save the princess.)

    6. Who has not fallen asleep in an enchanted castle and why? (Answer: a king and queen, so that there is someone to rule the kingdom.)

    7. Why did the prince find himself in an enchanted castle alone, without an entourage? (Answer: only trees and thorny bushes parted in front of him.)

    8. Why the second time Thumbnail Boy couldn't find his way out of the thicket? (Answer: the birds ate bread crumbs.)

    9. Why did the mother love the eldest daughter in the fairy tale "Fairy Gifts"? (Answer: she looked like her - rough)

    10. Why did the cat come up with a new name for its owner? (Answer: Only a nobleman with a title could succeed at court.)

    6. Station "Artist-illustrator" With your eyes closed, draw a cat's face for the tale of Ch. Perrault "Puss in Boots"