<p>Although dozens of disabled characters appear in the Grimms&rsquo; <em>Children&rsquo;s and Household Tales</em> the issue of disability in their collection has remained largely unexplored by scholars. In <em>Disability Deformity and Disease in the Grimms&rsquo; Fairy Tales</em> author Ann Schmiesing analyzes various representations of disability in the tales and also shows how the Grimms&rsquo; editing (or &ldquo;prostheticizing&rdquo;) of their tales over seven editions significantly influenced portrayals of disability and related manifestations of physical difference both in many individual tales and in the collection overall.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;Schmiesing begins by exploring instabilities in the Grimms&rsquo; conception of the fairy tale as a healthy and robust genre that has nevertheless been damaged and needs to be restored to its organic state. In chapter 2 she extends this argument by examining tales such as &ldquo;The Three Army Surgeons&rdquo; and &ldquo;Brother Lustig&rdquo; that problematize against the backdrop of war characters&rsquo; efforts to restore wholeness to the impaired or diseased body. She goes on in chapter 3 to study the gendering of disability in the Grimms&rsquo; tales with particular emphasis on the Grimms&rsquo; editing of &ldquo;The Maiden Without Hands&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Frog King or Iron Henry.&rdquo; In chapter 4 Schmiesing considers contradictions in portrayals of characters such as Hans My Hedgehog and the Donkey as both cripple and &ldquo;supercripple&rdquo;&mdash;a figure who miraculously &ldquo;overcomes&rdquo; his disability and triumphs despite social stigma. &nbsp;Schmiesing examines in chapter 5 tales in which no magical erasure of disability occurs but in which protagonists are depicted figuratively &ldquo;overcoming&rdquo; disability by means of other personal abilities or traits.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;The Grimms described the fairy tale using metaphors of able-bodiedness and wholeness and espoused a Romantic view of their editorial process as organic restoration. <em>Disability Deformity and Disease in the Grimms&rsquo; Fairy Tales</em> shows however the extent to which the Grimms&rsquo; personal experience of disability and illness impacted the tales and reveals the many disability-related amendments that exist within them. Readers interested in fairy-tales studies and disability studies will appreciate this careful reading of the Grimms&rsquo; tales.</p>
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