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Goldilocks and the three bears

LC control no.n 79045472
Descriptive conventionsrda
Uniform title headingGoldilocks and the three bears
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Variant(s)Three bears
3 bears
Special noteDESCRIPTIVE USAGE: Access point for the basic story, not to be used as an authorized access point in bibliographic records without language of expression added, e.g., Little Red Riding Hood. German. Treat individual adaptations of the story as new works (6.27.1.5), e.g., Roberts, Tom, 1944- Goldilocks; Elya, Susan Middleton, 1955- Rubia and the three osos.
SUBJECT USAGE: This access point is not valid for use as a subject. Works about this tale are entered under the subject heading Three bears (Tale)
Found inKincaid, L. Goldilocks and the three bears, 1983, c1978: CIP t.p. (Goldilocks and the three bears)
Funk & Wagnalls standard dict. of folklore: under Three bears (The familiar children's story Goldilocks and the three bears has its roots in Robert Southey's [The story of the] three bears, which first appeared in v. 4 (1837) of his miscellany The doctor; Southey's version has a mannerless old woman as the trespasser; in 1881 Horace E. Scudder retold the story with a little girl, Silverhair, in her place; later in the 19th cent. the girl's name became Goldilocks)