The Fisher-Girl and the Crab

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The Fisher-Girl and the Crab is an Indian fairy tale collected by Verrier Elwin in Folk-Tales of Mahakoshal.[1] The story comes from the Kurukh people, a ethnolinguistic group living in Chitrakoot, Bastar State.[2]:19

A childless Kurukh couple found a gourd by their rice field and prepared to eat it, but the gourd begged them to gently cut it open. Inside the gourd was a talking crab, whom the couple decided to adopt. The woman tied a basket to her belly, pretended to be pregnant, and then claimed to have given birth to the crab.

In time, the couple married their son to a human woman. However, the son's new wife did not like being married to a crab. She snuck off while her in-laws were asleep, but the crab was already ahead of her. He asked a banyan tree who it belonged to. The tree answered that it belonged to the crab, and he ordered it to bend down, which it did. He then traded his crab shape for a human shape from within the tree. The crab's wife unknowingly met him at a dance and gifted him her ornaments. He rushed home before her, returning to his crab shape again and gave his wife her ornaments back, but this only frightened her more.

The wife pretended to sneak out again but this time, stayed hidden nearby to watch the crab. After the crab had put on his human shape and departed, his wife approached and asked the banyan tree whose it belonged to. When the tree said it was hers, she ordered it to fall down and burn the crab shape, destroying it. When her husband could not find her at the dance, he came back to the tree, where she jumped out, caught him, and took him home.[3]

Analysis

Tale type

Folklorists Stith Thompson and Warren Roberts established an index for South Asian folktales based on the international Aarne-Thompson Index. In their joint work, titled Types of Indic Oral Tales, they classified the tale as type 441, "Hans My Hedgehog," a miscellaneous type that, while still belonging to the cycle of the Animal as Bridegroom and dealing with the marriage between a human maiden and an enchanted animal, lacks the quest for the vanished or missing husband element.[4]

Motifs

Elwin noted that the crab is considered monogamous and is an example of domestic fidelity.[2]

According to Stith Thompson and Jonas Balys [lt] study of motifs of Indian literature and oral folklore, the tale contains the motifs B647.1.1., "Marriage to person in crab form"[5] and D375., "Transformation: crab to man".[6]

Variants

See also

References

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