A Summary and Analysis of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ Fairy Tale (2024)

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

‘Little Red Riding Hood’ was, Charles Dickens said, his first love. It is one of the most universally known fairy tales: if you were to ask 100 people to name a fairy tale, ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ would be one of the most popular answers.

And much like a number of other fairy tales, which seem to have grown up around older oral tales (‘Rumpelstiltskin’, for instance, is reckoned to be a whopping 4,000 years old), ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ can be traced back to the 10th century when it was circulating as a French oral tale, and also existed as a fourteenth-century Italian story named ‘The False Grandmother’, though it only became popular under this name in the 1690s, when it appeared in the work of the French fabulist Charles Perrault. It rapidly established itself as one of the best-loved and familiar fairy stories in the western world.

Yet what is the meaning of ‘Little Red Riding Hood’? Before we venture an answer to this – via an analysis of the story’s key features – it’s worth recapping the plot in a brief summary.

Little Red Riding Hood: plot summary

A young village girl who lives with her mother is given a little red riding-hood to wear, and everyone starts to refer to her as ‘the Little Red Riding-Hood’ on account of it.

One day, the girl’s mother asks her to go and visit her grandmother, who lives in the next village, through the forest. Little Red Riding-Hood is given some food to take with her to give to her grandmother. She sets off, and on the way, while travelling through the woods, she meets a talking wolf, who asks her where she’s going.

Little Red Riding-Hood tells him that she’s going to visit her grandmother, and the wolf asks where her grandmother lives. Little Red Riding-Hood tells him she lives in the first house in the village, on the other side of the mill. The wolf says he’ll head there himself, taking a different route, and they can have a competition to see who can get there first.

While Little Red Riding-Hood takes her time walking to her grandmother’s house, picking nuts and flowers in the forest, the wolf legs it as fast as he can.

When he gets there, he knocks at the door and pretends it’s the woman’s granddaughter bearing food for her. The grandmother, who is in bed unwell, tells the wolf, believing him to be Little Red Riding-Hood, to pull the latch and come in. The wolf does so, and immediately falls upon the grandmother, devouring her. Then he gets into bed and pretends to be the woman he’s just so rudely gobbled up.

When Little Red Riding-Hood eventually hobbles into view, and knocks at the door, the wolf pretends to be the girl’s grandmother, whose voice sounds hoarse because ‘she’ has a sore throat.

Little Red Riding-Hood pulls the latch and enters the house, and is surprised by her grandmother’s big arms (‘all the better for embracing you, my child!’ her ‘grandmother’ replies), her deep voice (‘all the better for greeting you’), her big ears (‘all the better for hearing you’), her big eyes (‘all the better for seeing you’), and her big teeth (‘all the better to eat you with!’).

And with that, the wolf eats Little Red Riding-Hood, and that’s the rather less-than-happy ending of this classic fairy tale.

Or rather, that is how many versions of the tale of Little Red Riding-Hood end. But Little Red Riding-Hood doesn’t always die. Should the wolf be allowed his dessert (he has, after all, already devoured the grandma), or should he get his just deserts? Should ‘Little Red Riding-Hood’ have a happy ending, or should Little Red Riding-Hood meet a grisly end?

Surprisingly, it was the Victorian Dinah Mulock Craik who allowed the poor girl to be eaten up, while the Brothers Grimm – hardly queasy about the idea of children meeting a gruesome death – have the wolf fall asleep after he’s lunched on Little Red Riding-Hood and her grandmother, only for a huntsman to turn up and cut open the wolf’s stomach, freeing the (remarkably still living) young girl and her grandparent. Other versions let the girl live.

One French version from 1868 has her saved at the last minute, thanks to the remarkable deus ex machina involving a wasp stinging the wolf’s nostril, the sound of which gives a signal to a tomtit, which warns a nearby huntsman that something’s up, so he promptly shoots an arrow through the window, ending any further plans for lupine feasting. Some people went to considerable lengths to avoid Little Red Riding Hood ending up as lunch.

Little Red Riding Hood: analysis

But since she does tend to end up being eaten by the wolf, it’s worth asking what the moral of this fairy tale is supposed to be – assuming it has a moral.

A number of fairy tales are about the dangers of going off into the woods alone and talking to strange men (or, for that matter, talking wolves): compare here ‘Goldilocks and the Three Bears’. Little Red Riding-Hood goes out into the big bad world unsupervised, and is taken advantage of by the predatory wolf, which, thanks to her loose tongue, kills both her and her grandmother.

Little Red Riding-Hood is too innocent: she fails to realise that divulging the whereabouts of a vulnerable old woman might put her grandmother in danger, and then fails to run there as quickly as possible, in the hope of warning her grandmother or foiling the wolf’s plans (though it could be countered that a little girl would find it hard to outrun a wolf running at full pelt!).

The Brothers Grimm made the moral clearer, with Little Red-Cap being told by her mother not to stray from the path. It is the girl’s failure to follow this instruction that leads to her encounter with the big bad wolf, and her subsequent fate (though as we’ve seen, she’s brought back from the dead, or at least from the wolf’s belly, in the Grimms’ version).

But it is that final conversation between the wolf and Little Red Riding-Hood which remains iconic. It turns out that this, too, is older than the 1690s version of the fairy tale published by Perrault. The Opies draw a link between this exchange and one found in the Elder Edda (thirteenth century), which sees the Norse night-god Loki explaining the somewhat unfeminine attributes of the ‘woman’ who is being offered to the giant Thrym as his bride.

The bride is really Thor in disguise (the similarities between this tale and Little Red Riding-Hood are already becoming apparent), so the mischievous Loki has to do some serious sales patter here:

‘These maids of Asgard,’ said the Giants to each other, ‘they may be refined, as Thrym’s mother says, but their appetites are lusty enough.’

‘No wonder she eats, poor thing,’ said Loki to Thrym. ‘It is eight days since we left Asgard. And Freya never ate upon the way, so anxious was she to see Thrym and to come to his house.’

‘Poor darling, poor darling,’ said the Giant. ‘What she has eaten is little after all.’

Thor nodded his head toward the mead vat. Thrym ordered his servants to bring a measure to his bride. The servants were kept coming with measures to Thor. While the Giants watched, and while Loki nudged and nodded, he drank three barrels of mead.

‘Oh,’ said the Giants to Thrym’s mother, ‘we are not so sorry that we failed to win a bride from Asgard.’

And now a piece of the veil slipped aside and Thor’s eyes were seen for an instant. ‘Oh, how does it come that Freya has such glaring eyes?’ said Thrym.

‘Poor thing, poor thing,’ said Loki, ‘no wonder her eyes are glaring and staring. She has not slept for eight nights, so anxious was she to come to you and to your house, Thrym.’

All the better for conning you with, we might say.

We’ve been calling her ‘Little Red Riding-Hood’, but of course that’s only a nickname. In the version of the fairy tale included by the Opies in their indispensable The Classic Fairy TalesA Summary and Analysis of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ Fairy Tale (1), the Christian name of Little Red-Riding Hood is given as ‘Biddy’.

As Dickens recalled in his short sketch ‘A Christmas Tree’: ‘I felt that if I could have married Little Red Riding-Hood, I should have known perfect bliss. But, it was not to be.’

In summary, Little Red Riding-Hood is one of those fictional characters whom we meet in childhood and who remain as archetypes emblazoned on our imaginations. How we should analyse the story’s ultimate moral remains unclear, but it may well have stemmed from that age-old advice parents pass on to their children: don’t talk to strange men. Or wolves.

But we’ve somehow lost that last bit.

Discover more classic fairy tales with our pick of the best fairy stories, our summary of the frog prince story, our summary of the tale of Bluebeard, and our analysis of the ‘Puss in Boots’ story.

The author of this article, Dr Oliver Tearle, is a literary critic and lecturer in English at Loughborough University. He is the author of, among others, The Secret Library: A Book-Lovers’ Journey Through Curiosities of HistoryA Summary and Analysis of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ Fairy Tale (2) and The Great War, The Waste Land and the Modernist Long Poem.

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A Summary and Analysis of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ Fairy Tale (2024)

FAQs

A Summary and Analysis of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ Fairy Tale? ›

The moral of "Little Red Riding Hood" is that children, especially young girls, must be cautious of strangers. While they may appear to be "tame, obliging, and gentle," they will eventually show their teeth and eat up innocent young girls. This animal reference hints strongly towards a sexual warning.

What is the main idea of the Little Red Riding Hood? ›

The moral of the story 'Little Red Riding Hood is that we should never trust strangers. Even a very friendly stranger may have bad intentions'. The sweet little girl, Little Red Riding Hood, finds herself in danger because she talks to the sly wolf and naively points out the direction of her grandmother's house.

What is the summary of the poem Little Red? ›

The poem describes Little Red as a girl who wears a red cape and carries a basket of food for her sick grandmother. As she walks through the forest, a wolf approaches her and asks where she is going. Little Red tells him about her grandmother's house, and the wolf tricks her into telling him the location.

What are the main events in Little Red Riding Hood? ›

In the wood, Little Red Riding Hood meets a wolf. The wolf stops her and asks her where she's going. She tells the wolf she's going to Grandma's. Following the wolf's suggestion, Little Red Riding Hood wanders off the path to pick some flowers for Grandma and the wolf runs straight to Grandma's cottage.

What is the main conflict in Little Red Riding Hood? ›

The conflict in this story is little red riding hood is going to give a basket of food to her grandma, and there is a wolf after her. Falling action: The wolf is chased off. Resouloution: Resouloution is the end of the story.

What message does Little Red Riding Hood have? ›

The theme and the moral of the story are practically identical, having to do with the danger of entrusting personal information to strangers, when away from the safety of one's home, and of disobeying one's parents.

What is the focus of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Little Red Riding Hood is about morality |. The genre of the story is Mythology/folktale, the setting is Historical, and the heritage is European. Moral reasoning in the story focuses on self concern, concern for relationships, and concern for law and order. The theme of the story is Obey your parents.

What is the summary of Little Red Riding Wood? ›

"Little Red Riding Hood" by Charles Perrault tells of a young girl who comes across a cunning wolf on the way to her grandmother's home. The wolf deceives both her and her grandmother and eats them, a grim ending for the protagonist of the story. This version, by Charles Perrault, was first published in France in 1697.

What is the moral of the poem "Little Red"? ›

The lesson behind the fairytale “l*ttle Red Riding Hood”, is very simple: NEVER talk to strangers.

What does the wolf symbolize in Little Red Riding Hood? ›

The wolf in The Little Red Riding Hood symbolizes a number of things as it does in several other fairy tales. First, it portrays the image of cunning characters in the society. At first, the animal looks harmless upon meeting the girl in the forest.

What is the importance of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Theme: The theme of Little Red Riding Hood is to be careful of those who are predators who want to take the most valuable things in life away from others, to “feed” their own selfish reasons. One must be wary of those in disguise, even when they appear to be someone we love. Ask questions and be careful who you trust.

What's the climax of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Climax. The climax of the story is the peak of action and suspense. Everything has been building to this moment. In Little Red Riding Hood, this is her confrontation with the wolf dressed as her grandmother, ending with the wolf eating her.

What is an interesting fact about Little Red Riding Hood? ›

In earlier versions from rural France and Italy, the tale was called The Story of Grandmother. There was no red hood and the wolf was actually a werewolf. In some versions, he was an ogre.

What is the moral lesson of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Don't Talk to Strangers

Little Red Riding Hood should've known not to talk to strangers. To run the other way as fast as her feet would carry her but she took the time to talk to the wolf which was her downfall. A moral to learned here for everyone is to be careful around strangers even when you're an adult.

What is the theme of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

​Red Riding Hood ​has been told as a tale of childhood naivete in colorful picture books, as a bawdy adult tale of innocence lost in the woods, and a coming of age story that deals with themes ranging from morality, the boundaries of culture, social expectations and the relationship between the sexes.

What is the solution of the story "Little Red Riding Hood"? ›

Resolution: The resolution in the Grimm version is that Little Red Riding Hood learns to be careful with strangers. The Perrault version ends with the wolf winning.

What is the big idea of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Analysis of "Little Red Riding Hood" Upon first glance, Charles Perrault's "Little Red Riding Hood" appears to be a story warning children of the dangers of speaking to strangers, but as the reader examines the text further, it becomes a coming of age story as well.

What is the meaning of Riding Hood? ›

noun. : an enveloping hood or hooded cloak worn for riding and as an outdoor wrap by women and children.

What is the basis of Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Little Red Riding Hood is a European fairy tale about a young girl and a sly wolf. Its origins can be traced back to several pre-17th-century European folk tales. The two best known versions were written by Charles Perrault and the Brothers Grimm.

What was the story behind Little Red Riding Hood? ›

Little Red Riding Hood, fairy tale about a young girl who wears a red cloak and encounters a wolf on her way to visit her ailing grandmother. Depending on the version of the story, the girl is either eaten by the wolf or saved by a woodsman or hunter.

References

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