Mother GooseNo doubt the most famous collection of nursery rhymes is that of Mother Goose, a name still applied in the United States as a generic title for collections of nursery rhymes. In seventeenth-century France, a conte de ma mère l'Oie was a familiar phrase for an unlikely countrified yarn; Mother Goose got her real start with Charles Perrault's collection of fairy tales Histoires ou contes du temps passé, avec des moralités,1 which grew to become better known under its subtitle, Contes de ma mère l'Oie or Tales of Mother Goose. An English translation appeared in 1700, and a version published by John Newbery, ca. 1760-65, was pirated in Massachusetts about 1785. Some exegesesMany believe that Ring around the Rosies has a connection with the great plague. However, due to the fact that the rhyme has been around since before the plague, this stands as 'discredited'.citation needed A credible interpretation of "Pop Goes the Weasel" is that it is about silk weavers working with their shuttle or bobbin (known as a "weasel"). Another interpretation derives from the need for the poor working class to have to take their coats (weasels and stoats in Cockney Rhyming Slang) to pawnbrokers to obtain money for drinking. It is possible that the "eagle" mentioned in the song's third verse refers to The Eagle freehold pub along Shepherdess Walk in London, which was established as a music hall in 1825 and was rebuilt as a public house in 1901. This public house bears a plaque with this interpretation of the nursery rhyme and the pub's history. Shepherdess Walk is just off the City Road mentioned in the same verse ("Up and down the City Road, in and out The Eagle"). It is possible, even likely, that some nursery rhymes have been lost, as nursery rhymes are mainly an oral tradition passed down for hundreds, sometimes thousands of years. Because of the lack of literacy throughout much of history, no written records of them would have been made. Nursery rhyme revisionismThere have been several movements, across the world, to make nursery rhymes (along with fairy tales and popular songs) "politically correct".citation needed Psychoanalysts such as Bruno Bettelheim strongly criticized this revisionism, on the grounds that it weakened their usefulness to both children and adults as ways of symbolically resolving issues.2 Such revised versions may not perform the functions of catharsis for children, or allow them to imaginatively deal with violence and danger.citation needed Also, a society as a whole may be the poorer for it, because it loses opportunities to discuss obsolete values, even repulsive ones (like racism).citation needed See also
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