by Emily Temple
Sleeping Beauty
In one of the very earliest versions of this classic story, published in 1634 kwa Giambattista Basile as Sun, Moon, and Talia, the princess does not prick her finger on a spindle, but rather gets a sliver of lin, kitani stuck under her fingernail. She falls down, apparently dead, but her father cannot face the idea of losing her, so he lays her body on a kitanda in one of his estates.
Later, a king out hunting in the woods finds her, and since he can’t wake her up, rapes her while she’s unconscious, then heads nyumbani to his own country. Some time after that, still unconscious,...
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