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Puss in Boots

"Puss in Boots" (Italian: Il gatto con gli stivali) is an Italian[1][2] fairy tale, later spread throughout the rest of Europe, about an anthropomorphic cat who uses trickery and deceit to gain power, wealth, and the hand of a princess in marriage for his penniless and low-born master.

"Puss in Boots"
by Giovanni Francesco Straparola
Giambattista Basile
Charles Perrault
Illustration 1843, from édition L. Curmer
CountryItaly (1550–1553)
France (1697)
LanguageItalian (originally)
Genre(s)Literary fairy tale
Publication typeFairy tale collection

The oldest written telling is by Italian author Giovanni Francesco Straparola, who included it in his The Facetious Nights of Straparola (c. 1550–1553) in XIV–XV. Another version was published in 1634 by Giambattista Basile with the title Cagliuso, and a tale was written in French at the close of the seventeenth century by Charles Perrault (1628–1703), a retired civil servant and member of the Académie française. There is a version written by Girolamo Morlini, from whom Straparola used various tales in The Facetious Nights of Straparola.[3] The tale appeared in a handwritten and illustrated manuscript two years before its 1697 publication by Barbin in a collection of eight fairy tales by Perrault called Histoires ou contes du temps passé.[4][5] The book was an instant success and remains popular.[3]

Perrault's Histoires has had considerable impact on world culture. The original Italian title of the first edition was Costantino Fortunato, but was later known as Il gatto con gli stivali (lit. The cat with the boots); the French title was "Histoires ou contes du temps passé, avec des moralités" with the subtitle "Les Contes de ma mère l'Oye" ("Stories or Fairy Tales from Past Times with Morals", subtitled "Mother Goose Tales"). The frontispiece to the earliest English editions depicts an old woman telling tales to a group of children beneath a placard inscribed "MOTHER GOOSE'S TALES" and is credited with launching the Mother Goose legend in the English-speaking world.[4]

"Puss in Boots" has provided inspiration for composers, choreographers, and other artists over the centuries. The cat appears in the third act pas de caractère of Tchaikovsky's ballet The Sleeping Beauty.[6] Puss in Boots appears in DreamWorks' Shrek franchise, appearing in all three sequels to the original film, as well as two spin-off films, Puss in Boots (2011) and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (2022), where he is voiced by Antonio Banderas. The character is signified in the logo of Japanese anime studio Toei Animation, and is also a popular pantomime in the UK.

Plot

The tale opens with the third and youngest son of a miller receiving his inheritance - a cat. At first, the youngest son laments, as the eldest brother gains their father's mill, and the middle brother gets the mule-and-cart. However, the feline is no ordinary cat, but one who requests and receives a pair of boots. Determined to make his master's fortune, the cat bags a rabbit in the forest and presents it to the king as a gift from his master, the fictional Marquis of Carabas. The cat continues making gifts of game to the king for several months, for which he is rewarded.

 
Puss meets the ogre in a nineteenth-century illustration by Gustave Doré

One day, the king decides to take a drive with his daughter. The cat persuades his master to remove his clothes and enter the river which their carriage passes. The cat disposes of his master's clothing beneath a rock. As the royal coach nears, the cat begins calling for help in great distress. When the king stops to investigate, the cat tells him that his master the Marquis has been bathing in the river and robbed of his clothing. The king has the young man brought from the river, dressed in a splendid suit of clothes, and seated in the coach with his daughter, who falls in love with him at once.

The cat hurries ahead of the coach, ordering the country folk along the road to tell the king that the land belongs to the "Marquis of Carabas", saying that if they do not he will cut them into mincemeat. The cat then happens upon a castle inhabited by an ogre who is capable of transforming himself into a number of creatures. The ogre displays his ability by changing into a lion, frightening the cat, who then tricks the ogre into changing into a mouse. The cat then pounces upon the mouse and devours it. The king arrives at the castle that formerly belonged to the ogre, and impressed with the bogus Marquis and his estate, gives the lad the princess in marriage. Thereafter; the cat enjoys life as a great lord who runs after mice only for his own amusement.[7]

The tale is followed immediately by two morals; "one stresses the importance of possessing industrie and savoir faire while the other extols the virtues of dress, countenance, and youth to win the heart of a princess".[8] The Italian translation by Carlo Collodi notes that the tale gives useful advice if you happen to be a cat or a Marquis of Carabas.

This is the theme in France, but other versions of this theme exist in Asia, Africa, and South America.[9]

Background

 
Handwritten and illustrated manuscript of Perrault's "Le Maître Chat" dated 1695

Perrault's the "Master Cat or Puss in Boots" is the most renowned tale in all of Western folklore of the animal as helper.[10] However, the trickster cat did not originate with Perrault.[11] Centuries before the publication of Perrault's tale, Somadeva, a Kashmir Brahmin, assembled a vast collection of Indian folk tales called Kathā Sarit Sāgara (lit. "The ocean of the streams of stories") that featured stock fairy tale characters and trappings such as invincible swords, vessels that replenish their contents, and helpful animals. In the Panchatantra (lit. "Five Principles"), a collection of Hindu tales from the second century BC., a tale follows a cat who fares much less well than Perrault's Puss as he attempts to make his fortune in a king's palace.[12]

In 1553, "Costantino Fortunato", a tale similar to "Le Maître Chat", was published in Venice in Giovanni Francesco Straparola's Le Piacevoli Notti (lit. The Facetious Nights),[13] the first European storybook to include fairy tales.[14] In Straparola's tale however, the poor young man is the son of a Bohemian woman, the cat is a fairy in disguise, the princess is named Elisetta, and the castle belongs not to an ogre but to a lord who conveniently perishes in an accident. The poor young man eventually becomes King of Bohemia.[13] An edition of Straparola was published in France in 1560.[10] The abundance of oral versions after Straparola's tale may indicate an oral source to the tale; it also is possible Straparola invented the story.[15]

In 1634, another tale with a trickster cat as hero was published in Giambattista Basile's collection Pentamerone although neither the collection nor the tale were published in France during Perrault's lifetime. In Basile's version, the lad is a beggar boy called Gagliuso (sometimes Cagliuso) whose fortunes are achieved in a manner similar to Perrault's Puss. However, the tale ends with Cagliuso, in gratitude to the cat, promising the feline a gold coffin upon his death. Three days later, the cat decides to test Gagliuso by pretending to be dead and is mortified to hear Gagliuso tell his wife to take the dead cat by its paws and throw it out the window. The cat leaps up, demanding to know whether this was his promised reward for helping the beggar boy to a better life. The cat then rushes away, leaving his master to fend for himself.[13] In another rendition, the cat performs acts of bravery, then a fairy comes and turns him to his normal state to be with other cats.

It is likely that Perrault was aware of the Straparola tale, since 'Facetious Nights' was translated into French in the sixteenth century and subsequently passed into the oral tradition.[3]

Publication

 
Giovanni Francesco Straparola is known as the writer of the oldest version of the tale. He probably invented the original story.
 
Detail of a portrait of Charles Perrault by Philippe Lallemand

The oldest record of written history was published in Venice by the Italian author Giovanni Francesco Straparola in his The Facetious Nights of Straparola (c. 1550–53) in XIV-XV. His original title was Costantino Fortunato (lit. Lucky Costantino).

The story was published under the French title Le Maître Chat, ou le Chat Botté ('Master Cat, or the Booted Cat') by Barbin in Paris in January 1697 in a collection of tales called Histoires ou contes du temps passé.[3] The collection included "La Belle au bois dormant" ("The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood"), "Le petit chaperon rouge" ("Little Red Riding Hood"), "La Barbe bleue" ("Blue Beard"), "Les Fées" ("The Enchanted Ones", or "Diamonds and Toads"), "Cendrillon, ou la petite pantoufle de verre" ("Cinderella, or The Little Glass Slipper"), "Riquet à la Houppe" ("Riquet with the Tuft"), and "Le Petit Poucet" ("Hop o' My Thumb").[3] The book displayed a frontispiece depicting an old woman telling tales to a group of three children beneath a placard inscribed "CONTES DE MA MERE L'OYE" (Tales of Mother Goose).[4] The book was an instant success.[3]

Le Maître Chat first was translated into English as "The Master Cat, or Puss in Boots" by Robert Samber in 1729 and published in London for J. Pote and R. Montagu with its original companion tales in Histories, or Tales of Past Times, By M. Perrault.[note 1][16] The book was advertised in June 1729 as being "very entertaining and instructive for children".[16] A frontispiece similar to that of the first French edition appeared in the English edition launching the Mother Goose legend in the English-speaking world.[4] Samber's translation has been described as "faithful and straightforward, conveying attractively the concision, liveliness and gently ironic tone of Perrault's prose, which itself emulated the direct approach of oral narrative in its elegant simplicity."[17] Since that publication, the tale has been translated into various languages and published around the world.

Question of authorship

Perrault's son Pierre Darmancour was assumed to have been responsible for the authorship of Histoires with the evidence cited being the book's dedication to Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans, the youngest niece of Louis XIV, which was signed "P. Darmancour". Perrault senior, however, was known for some time to have been interested in contes de veille or contes de ma mère l'oye, and in 1693 published a versification of "Les Souhaits Ridicules" and, in 1694, a tale with a Cinderella theme called "Peau d'Ane".[4] Further, a handwritten and illustrated manuscript of five of the tales (including Le Maistre Chat ou le Chat Botté) existed two years before the tale's 1697 Paris publication.[4]

Pierre Darmancour was sixteen or seventeen years old at the time the manuscript was prepared and, as scholars Iona and Peter Opie note, quite unlikely to have been interested in recording fairy tales.[4] Darmancour, who became a soldier, showed no literary inclinations, and, when he died in 1700, his obituary made no mention of any connection with the tales. However, when Perrault senior died in 1703, the newspaper alluded to his being responsible for "La Belle au bois dormant", which the paper had published in 1696.[4]

Analysis

In folkloristics, Puss in Boots is classified as Aarne–Thompson–Uther ATU 545B, "Puss in Boots", a subtype of ATU 545, "The Cat as Helper".[18] Folklorists Joseph Jacobs and Stith Thompson point that the Perrault's tale is the possible source of the Cat Helper story in later European folkloric traditions.[19][20] The tale has also spread to the Americas, and is known in Asia (India, Indonesia and Philippines).[21]

Variations of the feline helper across cultures replace the cat with a jackal or fox.[22][23][24] For instance, the helpful animal is a monkey "in all Philippine variants" according to Damiana Eugenio.[25]

Greek scholar Marianthi Kaplanoglou states that the tale type ATU 545B, "Puss in Boots" (or, locally, "The Helpful Fox"), is an "example" of "widely known stories (...) in the repertoires of Greek refugees from Asia Minor".[26]

Adaptations

Perrault's tale has been adapted to various media over the centuries. Ludwig Tieck published a dramatic satire based on the tale, called Der gestiefelte Kater,[27] and, in 1812, the Brothers Grimm inserted a version of the tale into their Kinder- und Hausmärchen.[28] In ballet, Puss appears in the third act of Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty in a pas de caractère with The White Cat.[6]

The phrase "enough to make a cat laugh" dates from the mid-1800s and is associated with the tale of Puss in Boots.[29]

The Bibliothèque de Carabas[30] book series was published by David Nutt in London in the late 19th century, in which the front cover of each volume depicts Puss in Boots reading a book.

In film and television, Walt Disney produced an animated black and white silent short based on the tale in 1922.[31]

It was also adapted by Toei as anime feature film in 1969, It followed by two sequels. Hayao Miyazaki made manga series as a promotional tie-in for the film. The title character, Pero, named after Perrault, has since then become the mascot of Toei Animation, with his face appearing in the studio's logo.

In the mid-1980s, Puss in Boots was televised as an episode of Faerie Tale Theatre with Ben Vereen and Gregory Hines in the cast.[32]

1987's anime Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics features Puss in Boots, This version of Puss cheats his good-natured master out of money to buy his boots and his hat, hunts the king's favorite thrush for introduced his master to the king.

Another version from the Cannon Movie Tales series features Christopher Walken as Puss, who in this adaptation is a cat who turns into a human when wearing the boots.

The TV show Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child features the story in a Hawaiian setting. The episode stars the voices of David Hyde Pierce as Puss in Boots, Dean Cain as Kuhio, Pat Morita as King Makahana, and Ming-Na Wen as Lani. In addition, the shapeshifting ogre is replaced with a shapeshifting giant (voiced by Keone Young).

Another adaptation of the character with little relation to the story was in the Pokémon anime episode "Like a Meowth to a Flame," where a Meowth owned by the character Tyson wore boots, a hat, and a neckerchief.

DreamWorks Animation's 2004 animated film Shrek 2 features a version of the character voiced by Antonio Banderas (and modeled after Banderas' performance as Zorro). An assassin initially hired to kill Shrek, Puss becomes one of Shrek's most loyal allies following his defeat. Banderas also voices Puss in the third and fourth films in the Shrek franchise, and in a 2011 spin-off animated feature Puss in Boots, which spawned a 2022 sequel Puss in Boots: The Last Wish. Puss also appears in the Netflix/DreamWorks series The Adventures of Puss in Boots where he is voiced by Eric Bauza.

Commentaries

Jacques Barchilon and Henry Pettit note in their introduction to The Authentic Mother Goose: Fairy Tales and Nursery Rhymes that the main motif of "Puss in Boots" is the animal as helper and that the tale "carries atavistic memories of the familiar totem animal as the father protector of the tribe found everywhere by missionaries and anthropologists." They also note that the title is original with Perrault as are the boots; no tale prior to Perrault's features a cat wearing boots.[33]

 
Woodcut frontispiece copied from the 1697 Paris edition of Perrault's tales and published in the English-speaking world.

Folklorists Iona and Peter Opie observe that "the tale is unusual in that the hero little deserves his good fortune, that is if his poverty, his being a third child, and his unquestioning acceptance of the cat's sinful instructions, are not nowadays looked upon as virtues." The cat should be acclaimed the prince of 'con' artists, they declare, as few swindlers have been so successful before or since.[11]

The success of Histoires is attributed to seemingly contradictory and incompatible reasons. While the literary skill employed in the telling of the tales has been recognized universally, it appears the tales were set down in great part as the author heard them told. The evidence for that assessment lies first in the simplicity of the tales, then in the use of words that were, in Perrault's era, considered populaire and du bas peuple, and finally, in the appearance of vestigial passages that now are superfluous to the plot, do not illuminate the narrative, and thus, are passages the Opies believe a literary artist would have rejected in the process of creating a work of art. One such vestigial passage is Puss's boots; his insistence upon the footwear is explained nowhere in the tale, it is not developed, nor is it referred to after its first mention except in an aside.[34]

According to the Opies, Perrault's great achievement was accepting fairy tales at "their own level." He recounted them with neither impatience nor mockery, and without feeling that they needed any aggrandisement such as a frame story—although he must have felt it useful to end with a rhyming moralité. Perrault would be revered today as the father of folklore if he had taken the time to record where he obtained his tales, when, and under what circumstances.[34]

Bruno Bettelheim remarks that "the more simple and straightforward a good character in a fairy tale, the easier it is for a child to identify with it and to reject the bad other." The child identifies with a good hero because the hero's condition makes a positive appeal to him. If the character is a very good person, then the child is likely to want to be good too. Amoral tales, however, show no polarization or juxtaposition of good and bad persons because amoral tales such as "Puss in Boots" build character, not by offering choices between good and bad, but by giving the child hope that even the meekest can survive. Morality is of little concern in these tales, but rather, an assurance is provided that one can survive and succeed in life.[35]

Small children can do little on their own and may give up in disappointment and despair with their attempts. Fairy stories, however, give great dignity to the smallest achievements (such as befriending an animal or being befriended by an animal, as in "Puss in Boots") and that such ordinary events may lead to great things. Fairy stories encourage children to believe and trust that their small, real achievements are important although perhaps not recognized at the moment.[36]

 
An early nineteenth-century engraving of Perrault surrounded by vignettes from Histoires ou contes du temps passé

In Fairy Tales and the Art of Subversion Jack Zipes notes that Perrault "sought to portray ideal types to reinforce the standards of the civilizing process set by upper-class French society".[8] A composite portrait of Perrault's heroines, for example, reveals the author's idealized female of upper-class society is graceful, beautiful, polite, industrious, well groomed, reserved, patient, and even somewhat stupid because for Perrault, intelligence in womankind would be threatening. Therefore, Perrault's composite heroine passively waits for "the right man" to come along, recognize her virtues, and make her his wife. He acts, she waits. If his seventeenth century heroines demonstrate any characteristics, it is submissiveness.[37]

A composite of Perrault's male heroes, however, indicates the opposite of his heroines: his male characters are not particularly handsome, but they are active, brave, ambitious, and deft, and they use their wit, intelligence, and great civility to work their way up the social ladder and to achieve their goals. In this case of course, it is the cat who displays the characteristics and the man benefits from his trickery and skills. Unlike the tales dealing with submissive heroines waiting for marriage, the male-centered tales suggest social status and achievement are more important than marriage for men. The virtues of Perrault's heroes reflect upon the bourgeoisie of the court of Louis XIV and upon the nature of Perrault, who was a successful civil servant in France during the seventeenth century.[8]

According to fairy and folk tale researcher and commentator Jack Zipes, Puss is "the epitome of the educated bourgeois secretary who serves his master with complete devotion and diligence."[37] The cat has enough wit and manners to impress the king, the intelligence to defeat the ogre, and the skill to arrange a royal marriage for his low-born master. Puss's career is capped by his elevation to grand seigneur[8] and the tale is followed by a double moral: "one stresses the importance of possessing industrie et savoir faire while the other extols the virtues of dress, countenance, and youth to win the heart of a princess."[8]

The renowned illustrator of Dickens' novels and stories, George Cruikshank, was shocked that parents would allow their children to read "Puss in Boots" and declared: "As it stood the tale was a succession of successful falsehoods—a clever lesson in lying!—a system of imposture rewarded with the greatest worldly advantages."

Another critic, Maria Tatar, notes that there is little to admire in Puss—he threatens, flatters, deceives, and steals in order to promote his master. She further observes that Puss has been viewed as a "linguistic virtuoso", a creature who has mastered the arts of persuasion and rhetoric to acquire power and wealth.[5]

"Puss in Boots" has successfully supplanted its antecedents by Straparola and Basile and the tale has altered the shapes of many older oral trickster cat tales where they still are found. The morals Perrault attached to the tales are either at odds with the narrative, or beside the point. The first moral tells the reader that hard work and ingenuity are preferable to inherited wealth, but the moral is belied by the poor miller's son who neither works nor uses his wit to gain worldly advantage, but marries into it through trickery performed by the cat. The second moral stresses womankind's vulnerability to external appearances: fine clothes and a pleasant visage are enough to win their hearts. In an aside, Tatar suggests that if the tale has any redeeming meaning, "it has something to do with inspiring respect for those domestic creatures that hunt mice and look out for their masters."[38]

Briggs does assert that cats were a form of fairy in their own right having something akin to a fairy court and their own set of magical powers. Still, it is rare in Europe's fairy tales for a cat to be so closely involved with human affairs. According to Jacob Grimm, Puss shares many of the features that a household fairy or deity would have including a desire for boots which could represent seven-league boots. This may mean that the story of "Puss and Boots" originally represented the tale of a family deity aiding an impoverished family member.[39][self-published source]

Stefan Zweig, in his 1939 novel, Ungeduld des Herzens, references Puss in Boots' procession through a rich and varied countryside with his master and drives home his metaphor with a mention of Seven League Boots.

References

Notes
  1. ^ The distinction of being the first to translate the tales into English was long questioned. An edition styled Histories or Tales of Past Times, told by Mother Goose, with Morals. Written in French by M. Perrault, and Englished by G.M. Gent bore the publication date of 1719, thus casting doubt upon Samber being the first translator. In 1951, however, the date was proven to be a misprint for 1799 and Samber's distinction as the first translator was assured.
Footnotes
  1. ^ W. G. Waters, The Mysterious Giovan Francesco Straparola, in Jack Zipes, a c. di, The Great Fairy Tale Tradition: From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm, p 877, ISBN 0-393-97636-X
  2. ^ Opie & Opie 1974 Further info: Little Red Pentecostal 2007-10-23 at the Wayback Machine, Peter J. Leithart, July 9, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Opie & Opie 1974, p. 21.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Opie & Opie 1974, p. 23.
  5. ^ a b Tatar 2002, p. 234
  6. ^ a b Brown 2007, p. 351
  7. ^ Opie & Opie 1974, pp. 113–116
  8. ^ a b c d e Zipes 1991, p. 26
  9. ^ Darnton, Robert (1984). The Great Cat Massacre. New York, NY: Basic Books, Ink. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-465-01274-9.
  10. ^ a b Opie & Opie 1974, p. 110.
  11. ^ a b Opie & Opie 1974, p. 110
  12. ^ Opie & Opie 1974, p. 18.
  13. ^ a b c Opie & Opie 1974, p. 112.
  14. ^ Opie & Opie 1974, p. 20.
  15. ^ Zipes 2001, p. 877
  16. ^ a b Opie & Opie 1974, p. 24.
  17. ^ Gillespie & Hopkins 2005, p. 351
  18. ^ Thompson, Stith. The Folktale. University of California Press. 1977. pp. 58-59. ISBN 0-520-03537-2
  19. ^ Thompson, Stith. The Folktale. University of California Press. 1977. p. 58. ISBN 0-520-03537-2
  20. ^ Jacobs, Joseph. European Folk and Fairy Tales. New York, London: G. P. Putnam's sons. 1916. pp. 239-240.
  21. ^ Thompson, Stith. The Folktale. University of California Press. 1977. p. 59. ISBN 0-520-03537-2.
  22. ^ Uther, Hans-Jörg (2006). "The Fox in World Literature: Reflections on a 'Fictional Animal'". Asian Folklore Studies. 65 (2): 133–160. JSTOR 30030396.
  23. ^ Kaplanoglou, Marianthi (January 1999). "AT 545B 'Puss in Boots' and 'The Fox-Matchmaker': From the Central Asian to the European Tradition". Folklore. 110 (1–2): 57–62. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1999.9715981. JSTOR 1261067.
  24. ^ Thompson, Stith. The Folktale. University of California Press. 1977. p. 58. ISBN 0-520-03537-2.
  25. ^ Eugenio, Damiana L. (1985). "Philippine Folktales: An Introduction". Asian Folklore Studies. 44 (2): 155–177. doi:10.2307/1178506. JSTOR 1178506.
  26. ^ Kaplanoglou, Marianthi (December 2010). "Two Storytellers from the Greek-Orthodox Communities of Ottoman Asia Minor. Analyzing Some Micro-data in Comparative Folklore". Fabula. 51 (3–4): 251–265. doi:10.1515/fabl.2010.024. S2CID 161511346.
  27. ^ Paulin 2002, p. 65
  28. ^ Wunderer 2008, p. 202
  29. ^ "https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/enough+to+make+a+cat+laugh">enough to make a cat laugh
  30. ^ "Nutt, Alfred Trübner". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35269. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  31. ^ . The Disney Encyclopedia of Animated Shorts. Archived from the original on 2016-06-05. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  32. ^ Zipes 1997, p. 102
  33. ^ Barchilon 1960, pp. 14, 16
  34. ^ a b Opie & Opie 1974, p. 22.
  35. ^ Bettelheim 1977, p. 10
  36. ^ Bettelheim 1977, p. 73
  37. ^ a b Zipes 1991, p. 25
  38. ^ Tatar 2002, p. 235
  39. ^ Nukiuk H. 2011 Grimm's Fairies: Discover the Fairies of Europe's Fairy Tales, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Works cited

Further reading

  • Kaplanoglou, Marianthi (January 1999). "AT 545B 'Puss in Boots' and 'The Fox-Matchmaker': From the Central Asian to the European Tradition". Folklore. 110 (1–2): 57–62. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1999.9715981. JSTOR 1261067.
  • Neuhaus, Mareike (2011). "The Rhetoric of Harry Robinson's 'Cat With the Boots On'". Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature. 44 (2): 35–51. JSTOR 44029507. Project MUSE 440541 ProQuest 871355970.
  • Nikolajeva, Maria (2009). "Devils, Demons, Familiars, Friends: Toward a Semiotics of Literary Cats". Marvels & Tales. 23 (2): 248–267. JSTOR 41388926.
  • Blair, Graham (2019). "Jack Ships to the Cat". Clever Maids, Fearless Jacks, and a Cat: Fairy Tales from a Living Oral Tradition. University Press of Colorado. pp. 93–103. ISBN 978-1-60732-919-0. JSTOR j.ctvqc6hwd.11.

External links

  • Origin of the Story of 'Puss in Boots'
  • "Puss in Boots" – English translation from The Blue Fairy Book (1889)
  • "Puss in Boots" – Beautifully illustrated in The Colorful Story Book (1941)
  •   Master Cat, or Puss in Boots, The public domain audiobook at LibriVox

puss, boots, this, article, about, 1697, italian, french, fairy, tale, other, uses, disambiguation, italian, gatto, stivali, italian, fairy, tale, later, spread, throughout, rest, europe, about, anthropomorphic, uses, trickery, deceit, gain, power, wealth, han. This article is about the 1697 Italian French fairy tale For other uses see Puss in Boots disambiguation Puss in Boots Italian Il gatto con gli stivali is an Italian 1 2 fairy tale later spread throughout the rest of Europe about an anthropomorphic cat who uses trickery and deceit to gain power wealth and the hand of a princess in marriage for his penniless and low born master Puss in Boots by Giovanni Francesco StraparolaGiambattista BasileCharles PerraultIllustration 1843 from edition L CurmerCountryItaly 1550 1553 France 1697 LanguageItalian originally Genre s Literary fairy talePublication typeFairy tale collectionThe oldest written telling is by Italian author Giovanni Francesco Straparola who included it in his The Facetious Nights of Straparola c 1550 1553 in XIV XV Another version was published in 1634 by Giambattista Basile with the title Cagliuso and a tale was written in French at the close of the seventeenth century by Charles Perrault 1628 1703 a retired civil servant and member of the Academie francaise There is a version written by Girolamo Morlini from whom Straparola used various tales in The Facetious Nights of Straparola 3 The tale appeared in a handwritten and illustrated manuscript two years before its 1697 publication by Barbin in a collection of eight fairy tales by Perrault called Histoires ou contes du temps passe 4 5 The book was an instant success and remains popular 3 Perrault s Histoires has had considerable impact on world culture The original Italian title of the first edition was Costantino Fortunato but was later known as Il gatto con gli stivali lit The cat with the boots the French title was Histoires ou contes du temps passe avec des moralites with the subtitle Les Contes de ma mere l Oye Stories or Fairy Tales from Past Times with Morals subtitled Mother Goose Tales The frontispiece to the earliest English editions depicts an old woman telling tales to a group of children beneath a placard inscribed MOTHER GOOSE S TALES and is credited with launching the Mother Goose legend in the English speaking world 4 Puss in Boots has provided inspiration for composers choreographers and other artists over the centuries The cat appears in the third act pas de caractere of Tchaikovsky s ballet The Sleeping Beauty 6 Puss in Boots appears in DreamWorks Shrek franchise appearing in all three sequels to the original film as well as two spin off films Puss in Boots 2011 and Puss in Boots The Last Wish 2022 where he is voiced by Antonio Banderas The character is signified in the logo of Japanese anime studio Toei Animation and is also a popular pantomime in the UK Contents 1 Plot 2 Background 3 Publication 4 Question of authorship 5 Analysis 6 Adaptations 7 Commentaries 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPlot EditThe tale opens with the third and youngest son of a miller receiving his inheritance a cat At first the youngest son laments as the eldest brother gains their father s mill and the middle brother gets the mule and cart However the feline is no ordinary cat but one who requests and receives a pair of boots Determined to make his master s fortune the cat bags a rabbit in the forest and presents it to the king as a gift from his master the fictional Marquis of Carabas The cat continues making gifts of game to the king for several months for which he is rewarded Puss meets the ogre in a nineteenth century illustration by Gustave Dore One day the king decides to take a drive with his daughter The cat persuades his master to remove his clothes and enter the river which their carriage passes The cat disposes of his master s clothing beneath a rock As the royal coach nears the cat begins calling for help in great distress When the king stops to investigate the cat tells him that his master the Marquis has been bathing in the river and robbed of his clothing The king has the young man brought from the river dressed in a splendid suit of clothes and seated in the coach with his daughter who falls in love with him at once The cat hurries ahead of the coach ordering the country folk along the road to tell the king that the land belongs to the Marquis of Carabas saying that if they do not he will cut them into mincemeat The cat then happens upon a castle inhabited by an ogre who is capable of transforming himself into a number of creatures The ogre displays his ability by changing into a lion frightening the cat who then tricks the ogre into changing into a mouse The cat then pounces upon the mouse and devours it The king arrives at the castle that formerly belonged to the ogre and impressed with the bogus Marquis and his estate gives the lad the princess in marriage Thereafter the cat enjoys life as a great lord who runs after mice only for his own amusement 7 The tale is followed immediately by two morals one stresses the importance of possessing industrie and savoir faire while the other extols the virtues of dress countenance and youth to win the heart of a princess 8 The Italian translation by Carlo Collodi notes that the tale gives useful advice if you happen to be a cat or a Marquis of Carabas This is the theme in France but other versions of this theme exist in Asia Africa and South America 9 Background Edit Handwritten and illustrated manuscript of Perrault s Le Maitre Chat dated 1695 Perrault s the Master Cat or Puss in Boots is the most renowned tale in all of Western folklore of the animal as helper 10 However the trickster cat did not originate with Perrault 11 Centuries before the publication of Perrault s tale Somadeva a Kashmir Brahmin assembled a vast collection of Indian folk tales called Katha Sarit Sagara lit The ocean of the streams of stories that featured stock fairy tale characters and trappings such as invincible swords vessels that replenish their contents and helpful animals In the Panchatantra lit Five Principles a collection of Hindu tales from the second century BC a tale follows a cat who fares much less well than Perrault s Puss as he attempts to make his fortune in a king s palace 12 In 1553 Costantino Fortunato a tale similar to Le Maitre Chat was published in Venice in Giovanni Francesco Straparola s Le Piacevoli Notti lit The Facetious Nights 13 the first European storybook to include fairy tales 14 In Straparola s tale however the poor young man is the son of a Bohemian woman the cat is a fairy in disguise the princess is named Elisetta and the castle belongs not to an ogre but to a lord who conveniently perishes in an accident The poor young man eventually becomes King of Bohemia 13 An edition of Straparola was published in France in 1560 10 The abundance of oral versions after Straparola s tale may indicate an oral source to the tale it also is possible Straparola invented the story 15 In 1634 another tale with a trickster cat as hero was published in Giambattista Basile s collection Pentamerone although neither the collection nor the tale were published in France during Perrault s lifetime In Basile s version the lad is a beggar boy called Gagliuso sometimes Cagliuso whose fortunes are achieved in a manner similar to Perrault s Puss However the tale ends with Cagliuso in gratitude to the cat promising the feline a gold coffin upon his death Three days later the cat decides to test Gagliuso by pretending to be dead and is mortified to hear Gagliuso tell his wife to take the dead cat by its paws and throw it out the window The cat leaps up demanding to know whether this was his promised reward for helping the beggar boy to a better life The cat then rushes away leaving his master to fend for himself 13 In another rendition the cat performs acts of bravery then a fairy comes and turns him to his normal state to be with other cats It is likely that Perrault was aware of the Straparola tale since Facetious Nights was translated into French in the sixteenth century and subsequently passed into the oral tradition 3 Publication Edit Giovanni Francesco Straparola is known as the writer of the oldest version of the tale He probably invented the original story Detail of a portrait of Charles Perrault by Philippe Lallemand The oldest record of written history was published in Venice by the Italian author Giovanni Francesco Straparola in his The Facetious Nights of Straparola c 1550 53 in XIV XV His original title was Costantino Fortunato lit Lucky Costantino The story was published under the French title Le Maitre Chat ou le Chat Botte Master Cat or the Booted Cat by Barbin in Paris in January 1697 in a collection of tales called Histoires ou contes du temps passe 3 The collection included La Belle au bois dormant The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood Le petit chaperon rouge Little Red Riding Hood La Barbe bleue Blue Beard Les Fees The Enchanted Ones or Diamonds and Toads Cendrillon ou la petite pantoufle de verre Cinderella or The Little Glass Slipper Riquet a la Houppe Riquet with the Tuft and Le Petit Poucet Hop o My Thumb 3 The book displayed a frontispiece depicting an old woman telling tales to a group of three children beneath a placard inscribed CONTES DE MA MERE L OYE Tales of Mother Goose 4 The book was an instant success 3 Le Maitre Chat first was translated into English as The Master Cat or Puss in Boots by Robert Samber in 1729 and published in London for J Pote and R Montagu with its original companion tales in Histories or Tales of Past Times By M Perrault note 1 16 The book was advertised in June 1729 as being very entertaining and instructive for children 16 A frontispiece similar to that of the first French edition appeared in the English edition launching the Mother Goose legend in the English speaking world 4 Samber s translation has been described as faithful and straightforward conveying attractively the concision liveliness and gently ironic tone of Perrault s prose which itself emulated the direct approach of oral narrative in its elegant simplicity 17 Since that publication the tale has been translated into various languages and published around the world Question of authorship EditPerrault s son Pierre Darmancour was assumed to have been responsible for the authorship of Histoires with the evidence cited being the book s dedication to Elisabeth Charlotte d Orleans the youngest niece of Louis XIV which was signed P Darmancour Perrault senior however was known for some time to have been interested in contes de veille or contes de ma mere l oye and in 1693 published a versification of Les Souhaits Ridicules and in 1694 a tale with a Cinderella theme called Peau d Ane 4 Further a handwritten and illustrated manuscript of five of the tales including Le Maistre Chat ou le Chat Botte existed two years before the tale s 1697 Paris publication 4 Pierre Darmancour was sixteen or seventeen years old at the time the manuscript was prepared and as scholars Iona and Peter Opie note quite unlikely to have been interested in recording fairy tales 4 Darmancour who became a soldier showed no literary inclinations and when he died in 1700 his obituary made no mention of any connection with the tales However when Perrault senior died in 1703 the newspaper alluded to his being responsible for La Belle au bois dormant which the paper had published in 1696 4 Analysis EditIn folkloristics Puss in Boots is classified as Aarne Thompson Uther ATU 545B Puss in Boots a subtype of ATU 545 The Cat as Helper 18 Folklorists Joseph Jacobs and Stith Thompson point that the Perrault s tale is the possible source of the Cat Helper story in later European folkloric traditions 19 20 The tale has also spread to the Americas and is known in Asia India Indonesia and Philippines 21 Variations of the feline helper across cultures replace the cat with a jackal or fox 22 23 24 For instance the helpful animal is a monkey in all Philippine variants according to Damiana Eugenio 25 Greek scholar Marianthi Kaplanoglou states that the tale type ATU 545B Puss in Boots or locally The Helpful Fox is an example of widely known stories in the repertoires of Greek refugees from Asia Minor 26 Adaptations EditMain article Adaptations of Puss in Boots Perrault s tale has been adapted to various media over the centuries Ludwig Tieck published a dramatic satire based on the tale called Der gestiefelte Kater 27 and in 1812 the Brothers Grimm inserted a version of the tale into their Kinder und Hausmarchen 28 In ballet Puss appears in the third act of Tchaikovsky s The Sleeping Beauty in a pas de caractere with The White Cat 6 The phrase enough to make a cat laugh dates from the mid 1800s and is associated with the tale of Puss in Boots 29 The Bibliotheque de Carabas 30 book series was published by David Nutt in London in the late 19th century in which the front cover of each volume depicts Puss in Boots reading a book In film and television Walt Disney produced an animated black and white silent short based on the tale in 1922 31 It was also adapted by Toei as anime feature film in 1969 It followed by two sequels Hayao Miyazaki made manga series as a promotional tie in for the film The title character Pero named after Perrault has since then become the mascot of Toei Animation with his face appearing in the studio s logo In the mid 1980s Puss in Boots was televised as an episode of Faerie Tale Theatre with Ben Vereen and Gregory Hines in the cast 32 1987 s anime Grimm s Fairy Tale Classics features Puss in Boots This version of Puss cheats his good natured master out of money to buy his boots and his hat hunts the king s favorite thrush for introduced his master to the king Another version from the Cannon Movie Tales series features Christopher Walken as Puss who in this adaptation is a cat who turns into a human when wearing the boots The TV show Happily Ever After Fairy Tales for Every Child features the story in a Hawaiian setting The episode stars the voices of David Hyde Pierce as Puss in Boots Dean Cain as Kuhio Pat Morita as King Makahana and Ming Na Wen as Lani In addition the shapeshifting ogre is replaced with a shapeshifting giant voiced by Keone Young Another adaptation of the character with little relation to the story was in the Pokemon anime episode Like a Meowth to a Flame where a Meowth owned by the character Tyson wore boots a hat and a neckerchief DreamWorks Animation s 2004 animated film Shrek 2 features a version of the character voiced by Antonio Banderas and modeled after Banderas performance as Zorro An assassin initially hired to kill Shrek Puss becomes one of Shrek s most loyal allies following his defeat Banderas also voices Puss in the third and fourth films in the Shrek franchise and in a 2011 spin off animated feature Puss in Boots which spawned a 2022 sequel Puss in Boots The Last Wish Puss also appears in the Netflix DreamWorks series The Adventures of Puss in Boots where he is voiced by Eric Bauza Commentaries EditJacques Barchilon and Henry Pettit note in their introduction to The Authentic Mother Goose Fairy Tales and Nursery Rhymes that the main motif of Puss in Boots is the animal as helper and that the tale carries atavistic memories of the familiar totem animal as the father protector of the tribe found everywhere by missionaries and anthropologists They also note that the title is original with Perrault as are the boots no tale prior to Perrault s features a cat wearing boots 33 Woodcut frontispiece copied from the 1697 Paris edition of Perrault s tales and published in the English speaking world Folklorists Iona and Peter Opie observe that the tale is unusual in that the hero little deserves his good fortune that is if his poverty his being a third child and his unquestioning acceptance of the cat s sinful instructions are not nowadays looked upon as virtues The cat should be acclaimed the prince of con artists they declare as few swindlers have been so successful before or since 11 The success of Histoires is attributed to seemingly contradictory and incompatible reasons While the literary skill employed in the telling of the tales has been recognized universally it appears the tales were set down in great part as the author heard them told The evidence for that assessment lies first in the simplicity of the tales then in the use of words that were in Perrault s era considered populaire and du bas peuple and finally in the appearance of vestigial passages that now are superfluous to the plot do not illuminate the narrative and thus are passages the Opies believe a literary artist would have rejected in the process of creating a work of art One such vestigial passage is Puss s boots his insistence upon the footwear is explained nowhere in the tale it is not developed nor is it referred to after its first mention except in an aside 34 According to the Opies Perrault s great achievement was accepting fairy tales at their own level He recounted them with neither impatience nor mockery and without feeling that they needed any aggrandisement such as a frame story although he must have felt it useful to end with a rhyming moralite Perrault would be revered today as the father of folklore if he had taken the time to record where he obtained his tales when and under what circumstances 34 Bruno Bettelheim remarks that the more simple and straightforward a good character in a fairy tale the easier it is for a child to identify with it and to reject the bad other The child identifies with a good hero because the hero s condition makes a positive appeal to him If the character is a very good person then the child is likely to want to be good too Amoral tales however show no polarization or juxtaposition of good and bad persons because amoral tales such as Puss in Boots build character not by offering choices between good and bad but by giving the child hope that even the meekest can survive Morality is of little concern in these tales but rather an assurance is provided that one can survive and succeed in life 35 Small children can do little on their own and may give up in disappointment and despair with their attempts Fairy stories however give great dignity to the smallest achievements such as befriending an animal or being befriended by an animal as in Puss in Boots and that such ordinary events may lead to great things Fairy stories encourage children to believe and trust that their small real achievements are important although perhaps not recognized at the moment 36 An early nineteenth century engraving of Perrault surrounded by vignettes from Histoires ou contes du temps passe In Fairy Tales and the Art of Subversion Jack Zipes notes that Perrault sought to portray ideal types to reinforce the standards of the civilizing process set by upper class French society 8 A composite portrait of Perrault s heroines for example reveals the author s idealized female of upper class society is graceful beautiful polite industrious well groomed reserved patient and even somewhat stupid because for Perrault intelligence in womankind would be threatening Therefore Perrault s composite heroine passively waits for the right man to come along recognize her virtues and make her his wife He acts she waits If his seventeenth century heroines demonstrate any characteristics it is submissiveness 37 A composite of Perrault s male heroes however indicates the opposite of his heroines his male characters are not particularly handsome but they are active brave ambitious and deft and they use their wit intelligence and great civility to work their way up the social ladder and to achieve their goals In this case of course it is the cat who displays the characteristics and the man benefits from his trickery and skills Unlike the tales dealing with submissive heroines waiting for marriage the male centered tales suggest social status and achievement are more important than marriage for men The virtues of Perrault s heroes reflect upon the bourgeoisie of the court of Louis XIV and upon the nature of Perrault who was a successful civil servant in France during the seventeenth century 8 According to fairy and folk tale researcher and commentator Jack Zipes Puss is the epitome of the educated bourgeois secretary who serves his master with complete devotion and diligence 37 The cat has enough wit and manners to impress the king the intelligence to defeat the ogre and the skill to arrange a royal marriage for his low born master Puss s career is capped by his elevation to grand seigneur 8 and the tale is followed by a double moral one stresses the importance of possessing industrie et savoir faire while the other extols the virtues of dress countenance and youth to win the heart of a princess 8 The renowned illustrator of Dickens novels and stories George Cruikshank was shocked that parents would allow their children to read Puss in Boots and declared As it stood the tale was a succession of successful falsehoods a clever lesson in lying a system of imposture rewarded with the greatest worldly advantages Another critic Maria Tatar notes that there is little to admire in Puss he threatens flatters deceives and steals in order to promote his master She further observes that Puss has been viewed as a linguistic virtuoso a creature who has mastered the arts of persuasion and rhetoric to acquire power and wealth 5 Puss in Boots has successfully supplanted its antecedents by Straparola and Basile and the tale has altered the shapes of many older oral trickster cat tales where they still are found The morals Perrault attached to the tales are either at odds with the narrative or beside the point The first moral tells the reader that hard work and ingenuity are preferable to inherited wealth but the moral is belied by the poor miller s son who neither works nor uses his wit to gain worldly advantage but marries into it through trickery performed by the cat The second moral stresses womankind s vulnerability to external appearances fine clothes and a pleasant visage are enough to win their hearts In an aside Tatar suggests that if the tale has any redeeming meaning it has something to do with inspiring respect for those domestic creatures that hunt mice and look out for their masters 38 Briggs does assert that cats were a form of fairy in their own right having something akin to a fairy court and their own set of magical powers Still it is rare in Europe s fairy tales for a cat to be so closely involved with human affairs According to Jacob Grimm Puss shares many of the features that a household fairy or deity would have including a desire for boots which could represent seven league boots This may mean that the story of Puss and Boots originally represented the tale of a family deity aiding an impoverished family member 39 self published source Stefan Zweig in his 1939 novel Ungeduld des Herzens references Puss in Boots procession through a rich and varied countryside with his master and drives home his metaphor with a mention of Seven League Boots References EditNotes The distinction of being the first to translate the tales into English was long questioned An edition styled Histories or Tales of Past Times told by Mother Goose with Morals Written in French by M Perrault and Englished by G M Gent bore the publication date of 1719 thus casting doubt upon Samber being the first translator In 1951 however the date was proven to be a misprint for 1799 and Samber s distinction as the first translator was assured Footnotes W G Waters The Mysterious Giovan Francesco Straparola in Jack Zipes a c di The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm p 877 ISBN 0 393 97636 X Opie amp Opie 1974 Further info Little Red Pentecostal Archived 2007 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Peter J Leithart July 9 2007 a b c d e f Opie amp Opie 1974 p 21 a b c d e f g h Opie amp Opie 1974 p 23 a b Tatar 2002 p 234 a b Brown 2007 p 351 Opie amp Opie 1974 pp 113 116 a b c d e Zipes 1991 p 26 Darnton Robert 1984 The Great Cat Massacre New York NY Basic Books Ink p 29 ISBN 978 0 465 01274 9 a b Opie amp Opie 1974 p 110 a b Opie amp Opie 1974 p 110 Opie amp Opie 1974 p 18 a b c Opie amp Opie 1974 p 112 Opie amp Opie 1974 p 20 Zipes 2001 p 877 a b Opie amp Opie 1974 p 24 Gillespie amp Hopkins 2005 p 351 Thompson Stith The Folktale University of California Press 1977 pp 58 59 ISBN 0 520 03537 2 Thompson Stith The Folktale University of California Press 1977 p 58 ISBN 0 520 03537 2 Jacobs Joseph European Folk and Fairy Tales New York London G P Putnam s sons 1916 pp 239 240 Thompson Stith The Folktale University of California Press 1977 p 59 ISBN 0 520 03537 2 Uther Hans Jorg 2006 The Fox in World Literature Reflections on a Fictional Animal Asian Folklore Studies 65 2 133 160 JSTOR 30030396 Kaplanoglou Marianthi January 1999 AT 545B Puss in Boots and The Fox Matchmaker From the Central Asian to the European Tradition Folklore 110 1 2 57 62 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1999 9715981 JSTOR 1261067 Thompson Stith The Folktale University of California Press 1977 p 58 ISBN 0 520 03537 2 Eugenio Damiana L 1985 Philippine Folktales An Introduction Asian Folklore Studies 44 2 155 177 doi 10 2307 1178506 JSTOR 1178506 Kaplanoglou Marianthi December 2010 Two Storytellers from the Greek Orthodox Communities of Ottoman Asia Minor Analyzing Some Micro data in Comparative Folklore Fabula 51 3 4 251 265 doi 10 1515 fabl 2010 024 S2CID 161511346 Paulin 2002 p 65 Wunderer 2008 p 202 https idioms thefreedictionary com enough to make a cat laugh gt enough to make a cat laugh Nutt Alfred Trubner Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 35269 Subscription or UK public library membership required Puss in Boots The Disney Encyclopedia of Animated Shorts Archived from the original on 2016 06 05 Retrieved 2009 06 14 Zipes 1997 p 102 Barchilon 1960 pp 14 16 a b Opie amp Opie 1974 p 22 Bettelheim 1977 p 10 Bettelheim 1977 p 73 a b Zipes 1991 p 25 Tatar 2002 p 235 Nukiuk H 2011 Grimm s Fairies Discover the Fairies of Europe s Fairy Tales CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform Works citedBarchilon Jacques 1960 The Authentic Mother Goose Fairy Tales and Nursery Rhymes Denver CO Alan Swallow Bettelheim Bruno 1977 1975 1976 The Uses of Enchantment New York Random House Vintage Books ISBN 0 394 72265 5 Brown David 2007 Tchaikovsky New York Pegasus Books LLC ISBN 978 1 933648 30 9 Gillespie Stuart Hopkins David eds 2005 The Oxford History of Literary Translation in English 1660 1790 Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 924622 X Opie Iona Opie Peter 1974 The Classic Fairy Tales Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211559 6 Paulin Roger 2002 1985 Ludwig Tieck Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815852 1 Tatar Maria 2002 The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales New York and London W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 05163 3 Wunderer Rolf 2008 Der gestiefelte Kater als Unternehmer Weisbaden Gabler Verlag ISBN 978 3 8349 0772 1 Zipes Jack David 1991 1988 Fairy Tales and the Art of Subversion New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 90513 3 Zipes Jack David 2001 The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm p 877 ISBN 0 393 97636 X Zipes Jack David 1997 Happily Ever After New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 91851 0Further reading EditKaplanoglou Marianthi January 1999 AT 545B Puss in Boots and The Fox Matchmaker From the Central Asian to the European Tradition Folklore 110 1 2 57 62 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1999 9715981 JSTOR 1261067 Neuhaus Mareike 2011 The Rhetoric of Harry Robinson s Cat With the Boots On Mosaic A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 44 2 35 51 JSTOR 44029507 Project MUSE 440541 ProQuest 871355970 Nikolajeva Maria 2009 Devils Demons Familiars Friends Toward a Semiotics of Literary Cats Marvels amp Tales 23 2 248 267 JSTOR 41388926 Blair Graham 2019 Jack Ships to the Cat Clever Maids Fearless Jacks and a Cat Fairy Tales from a Living Oral Tradition University Press of Colorado pp 93 103 ISBN 978 1 60732 919 0 JSTOR j ctvqc6hwd 11 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Puss in boots Wikisource has original text related to this article Puss in Boots Origin of the Story of Puss in Boots Puss in Boots English translation from The Blue Fairy Book 1889 Puss in Boots Beautifully illustrated in The Colorful Story Book 1941 Master Cat or Puss in Boots The public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Puss in Boots amp oldid 1133267561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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