Once upon a law: the Grimm Brothers’ stories, language, and legal culture
What is the link between the Grimm Brothers’ collection of stories, and their work on language and law? This exhibition explores how the Grimm Brothers depicted the legal culture of their time through storytelling and the study of language.
Rediscover the Grimm stories you know and discover those you do not
Once upon a time, there were two brothers, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, who cared deeply about right and wrong. Following their father’s example, the brothers studied law under the renowned jurist Professor Friedrich Carl von Savigny. The Grimm Brothers began collecting folk stories while in law school. These tales were originally intended for other scholars. The brothers searched for social rules as depicted through the fantastical scenarios of fairy tales and yes, the law was omnipresent in popular culture… fairy tales were no exception. So, how was the legal culture of the time reflected in the fairy tales the Brothers Grimm published?
Once upon a law: the Grimm Brothers’ stories, language, and legal culture
The Maastricht University Library, the Faculty of Law, and the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences bring you an exhibition highlighting the relationship between the stories of the Brothers Grimm and their lesser-known work on language and law. The exhibition focuses on the perspective of the Grimm brothers as legal scholars. Through that lens, underlying legal customs become visible in the themes of their most famous fairy tales. In fact, their original intention had nothing to do with telling children’s stories. This exhibition marks the first-ever collaboration at Maastricht University between the library’s Special Collections, the Faculty of Law, and the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.
Rare books exhibited
Rare legal books and highly-prized illustrated fairy tales from the so-called Golden Age of Illustration (1880s-1930s) are on display. On an interactive panel, you can wear Little Red Riding Hood’s hooded cape and take a selfie with a custom fairy tale backdrop. The exhibit highlights the breadth of the Golden Age of Illustration collection held by Maastricht University Special Collections, a treasured assortment of more than fifty of the most beautifully illustrated children’s books from the turn of the twentieth century.
Couldn’t visit the exhibition physically?
No worries, the exhibition is also digitally available at onceuponalaw.org. That means you can still see the works now that the physical exhibition has closed. That means you can still learn all about the stories of the Brothers Grimm.
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