benlehman: (Snake)
benlehman ([personal profile] benlehman) wrote2006-03-27 06:13 pm

Three Bears

Man, I just can't figure this one out.

I think it's about class struggle, or maybe about guilt of conquest. But then, why the hot/cold/just right business?

[identity profile] ornithoptercat.livejournal.com 2006-03-28 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
Possibly it's a warning about being picky. You know, if you didn't waste all that time worrying about "just right", maybe you'd get out before the bears came back.

It may, however, just (or additionally) be a way of adding rythym and patterning to the story, and/or the general significance of threes. Remember, it comes from an oral tradition, so stuff may be in there for the sake of making it easy to retell. An awful lot of fairy tales have stuff like that, almost always in threes, in their older versions - I'm pretty sure The Little Mermaid originally had her come to the surface three times; the 12 Dancing Princesses also has a bunch of random threeness (especially the bit with the trees of silver, gold, and diamond); and I know older versions of Cinderella (or Ashputel) have her go to three nights of the ball before the business with the slipper happens. Speaking of Cinderella, there's something rather parallel in the "heel too big/toe too big/fits just right" bit with the shoe.

[identity profile] ornithoptercat.livejournal.com 2006-03-28 04:21 am (UTC)(link)
Having thought about it a few more minutes: you know that phrase "third time's a charm"? That's what's going on. It's a genre trope, and doesn't have to have any particular extra signifcance in a given story. Sort of like the thing in movies/TV where ALL bags of groceries contain a loaf of French bread, or how Beowulf is loaded with alliterative epithets, or the sea in Homer is always wine-dark... it's the structure and tradition of the medium, a thing that gives it the appropriate flavor and cadences and lets people make mental shortcuts, rather than content as such.