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Thread: Which Fairy Tales show medicine at work?

  1. #1
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    Which Fairy Tales show medicine at work?

    Hello, I'm a new kid on the block and delighted to be here. Could someone please give me some suggestions as to which Fairy Tales illustrate the good and bad characteristics of healers/medicine men/ doctors etc? I'm hoping to find a good story to illustrate these things to trainee doctors.

    Best wishes, LizzieGates

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    Lord Aragorn uses medicine in the curing of the fallen that still live in Return of the King.

  3. #3
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    Well, I don't suppose the cutting open of the wolf's belly in Little Red Riding Hood would count as surgery, would it?

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    Registered User prendrelemick's Avatar
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    Snow white, the poisened apple.

    Sleeping beauty, the prick (injection?) that knocked her out, and the mouth to mouth that revived her.

    Alice in wonderland, her experimentation with hallucinogenic mushrooms.

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    Serious business Taliesin's Avatar
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    Chukotka fairy-tales sometimes feature some kind of shaman who overpower/overwit ogres, and steal people's souls back from them, thus healing them.
    (which might not always be a good thing - I once read a Chukotka fairy tale which told how a powerful shaman stole another shamans sons soul from the Birdwoman who lived in another plane, brought the boy back to life and the last damn paragraph is something like this:
    "Be careful with him. I had to put some of my own power in him, but there is evil in him." And then the flew away.
    When the son grew up, he became a powerful evil shaman who destroyed all the people in the neighbourhood)
    I also think that shamanistic cultures might feature quite a lot of fairy-tales where the shaman is the hero.
    If you believe even a half of this post, you are severely mistaken.

  6. #6
    Exiled Pre-Raphaelite Gustavo L.'s Avatar
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    A wicked doctor helps to poison the king in "The Princess and Curdie" by George Macdonald.

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