Standard Number:7
Xpedition Hall
Check out:
X10: Xpeditions Express

Lesson Plans
- K-2: Modern Culture
- 3-5: Fairy Tales, Then and Now
- 6-8: Fast Food Around the World
- 9-12: Globalization

Standards
- Standard #10: The characteristics, distribution, and complexity of Earth's cultural mosaics


Extras //
XTRAS //
- Forget sugary cartoons. Get the Grimms' real stories in our interactive feature.
- Journey into the lives of "The Brothers Grimm" in a December 1999 National Geographic magazine article.
- Dive into great stories that can tell you much more.

Interactive Features //
INTERACTIVE FEATURES //
- Pirates of the Whydah: Think you know all about those "scurvy dogs" from stories and movies? Reality might surprise you.
- Salem Witchcraft Hysteria: This tale would frighten even the Grimms. But it was true, horribly true.
- Tale of Three Cities: Visit Egypt, Spain, and America to see how life has changed—and hasn't.


Links //
LINKS //
Click for more great links related to this activity.
Activities

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New Takes on Old Tales

Image: Hänsel and Grethel | << Hänsel and Grethel trick the wicked witch who has captured them.

Published in Fairy Tales by the Brothers Grimm (Harry Altemus, 1898)

Your Mission

Revamp a classic fairy tale so that it takes place in today's world.

Briefing

Buchenbruder Books (a wholly imagination-owned company) has a problem. For years, their best-seller in Germany was Grimms' Fairy Tales. But now every family in the country seems to own a copy, and sales have plunged. So they're trying something new—modern versions of the classic tales.

You have been hired to write the first of these modern adaptations. To make it compelling, you'll need to remind yourself that life has changed a lot since the Grimms published their tales in the 1800s. The more you can find out about modern Germany, the more convincing details you can add to your story. (If you'd prefer, try setting the tale in your own culture.)

To get started, pick a story from our interactive feature Grimms' Fairy Tales.

F A M I L Y - X  F I L E S

Younger Xpeditioners: Draw four or five pictures that tell the old version of one of the tales. Then draw the same scenes in a modern setting. What details did you change?

Older Xpeditioners: Make a comic book of one or several of the tales. You can create separate comics for old and new versions of the tales or mix things up. Perhaps a kid from today's world travels back in time, or a character from "once upon a time" lands in the year 2000. Be creative!

Parents: Read some of the tales with your children. Ask questions that get them thinking about what life might be like in another culture. You might ask younger kids if they would want to be children in the world portrayed by the Grimms' tales. Why or why not?

With older children, you might talk more explicitly about cultural differences. Issues to explore in comparing the Grimms' stories with modern life include how people make a living, parent-child relationships, and gender roles.


 

 

 
National Geographic Marco Polo Xpeditions Xpedition Hall Standards Activities Lesson Plans Atlas Forums Search Xpeditions Links 00 Introduction 01 The World in Spacial Terms 02 The World in Spacial Terms 03 The World in Spacial Terms 04 Places and Regions 05 Places and Regions 06 Places and Regions 07 Physical Systems 08 Physical Systems 09 Human Systems 10 Human Systems 11 Human Systems 12 Human Systems 13 Human Systems 14 Environment and Society 15 Environment and Society 16 Environment and Society 17 The Uses of Geography 18 The Uses of Geography