Wry political fairy tales from a nineteenth-century politician that
speak to our current times
Édouard Laboulaye (1811-1883), one of nineteenth-century France's most
prominent politicians and an instrumental figure in establishing the
Statue of Liberty, was also a prolific writer of fairy tales.
Smack-Bam, or The Art of Governing Men brings together sixteen of
Laboulaye's most artful stories in new translations. Filled with biting
social commentary and strong notions of social justice, these
rediscovered tales continue to impart lessons today.
Inspired by folktales from such places as Estonia, Germany, Iceland, and
Italy, Laboulaye's deceptively entertaining stories explore the
relationships between society and the ruling class. In "Briam the Fool,"
the hero refuses the queen's hand after he kills the king. In "Zerbino
the Bumpkin," the king and prime minister are idiots, while the king's
daughter runs away with a woodcutter to an enchanted island. And in the
title story, "Smack-Bam, or The Art of Governing Men," a superficial
prince is schooled by a middle-class woman who smacks him when he won't
engage in his lessons and follows him across Europe until he falls in
love with her. In these worlds, shallow aristocrats come to value
liberty, women are as assertive and intelligent as men, and protagonists
experience compassion as they learn of human suffering.
With an introduction by leading fairy-tale scholar Jack Zipes that
places Laboulaye's writing in historical context, Smack-Bam, or The Art
of Governing Men presents spirited tales from the past that speak to
contemporary life.