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Gabriel Garcia Marquez's Short Story 'Sleeping Beauty on the Airplane' and Grimm Brothers' Original 'Briar Rose': A Comparative Analysis

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I. Introduction Gabriel Garcia Marquez is not the first author to reinvent classic European fairy tales. Yet his short story "Sleeping Beauty on the Airplane," alternatively titled "The Plane of Sleeping Beauty" is a remarkable retelling of the Grimm Brothers' original "Briar Rose." The original story includes themes of jealousy, fate, and romantic love. Marquez abandons jealousy, as there is no evil queen spinning a trap for the princess. Therefore Marquez's "Sleeping Beauty on the Airplane" provides a unique lens for viewing and revisiting the Grimm Brothers' "Briar Rose." Marquez's story distorts the original fairy tale, highlighting the power of unrequited physical attraction between strangers. II. Body Paragraph: Introducing the Lens A. Summary: The narrator is a man traveling from Paris to New York. While waiting in line to check in, he spies "the most gorgeous woman I have ever seen in my life." The man proceeds to follow the woman, and fate would have it that he picked the seat right next to her. The woman sleeps the entire time on the plane, giving rise to the "sleeping beauty" motif. Unlike the original Briar Rose, though, the narrator never becomes her prince. He does not kiss her to wake her from the slumber, and they do not live happily ever after. Instead they barely speak. B. As a lens for Briar Rose, Marquez's "Sleeping Beauty on the Airplane" is told from the prince's perspective. Only for Marquez, the prince neither kisses nor wins over the heart of

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