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1%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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3[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chapbook_jack_the_giant_killer.jpg]]
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5"Jack the Giant Killer" is a British folktale about [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a youth named Jack who kills giants.]] It came into existence as a chapbook printed as "The History of Jack and the Giants" in 1711, which fused various older giant-killing tales into one narrative (which is why the story is longer and more episodic than a typical folktale).
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7The [[UsefulNotes/{{Cornwall}} Cornish]] Jack slays his first giant using a pit trap and a pickaxe, gaining him reputation amongst the nearby village. Following this he sets off on a series of challenges, encountering a giant named Blunderbore who he strangles with a cord. The third encounter is with a [[UsefulNotes/{{Wales}} Welsh]] giant, who tries to kill Jack while he is resting at his castle. Jack is able to trick this giant, however, and manages to get him to stab himself at breakfast. In the fourth encounter, Jack uses his [[InvisibilityCloak coat of invisibility]], which he received in the castle of the third giant, to attack a giant and his brother with impunity. The final encounter is with the giant Galligantus, whom he first scares with a blast on a magic trumpet, then cuts off his head and sends it to Myth/KingArthur. Jack is rewarded by receiving Arthur's daughter's hand in marriage.
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9The story has similar themes with the British "Literature/JackAndTheBeanstalk" and also the German "Literature/TheBraveLittleTailor" recorded by Creator/TheBrothersGrimm. Some versions include the "Fee-fie-fo-fum" chant more popularly known through the Beanstalk story. Its themes can be traced to the [[Myth/CelticMythology British]] (and more broadly European) body of folklore and legend. This can be seen in ''[[Literature/HistoriaRegumBritanniae The History of the Kings of Britain]]'', where the legendary Corineus fought giants and lent his name to Cornwall and the Cornish.
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11It was loosely adapted into [[Film/JackTheGiantKiller a 1962 film of the same name]]. The 2013 film ''Film/JackTheGiantSlayer'' alludes to this with its title, but is based on the Beanstalk story.
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13!! Tropes in "Jack the Giant Killer":
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15%%* BloodierAndGorier: Compared to Jack and the Beanstalk.
16* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: It's a story about a man named Jack who kills giants.
17* GuileHero: Since Jack obviously couldn't defeat the giants in a straight fight, he had to use different tricks to get the best of each.
18* ImAHumanitarian: The man-eating Cornish and Welsh giants of the story. Blunderbore also tries to force his human brides to eat the bodies of his victims.
19%%* TheKillerBecomesTheKilled: The giants.
20%%* LukeNounVerber
21* MonsterMisogyny: The giant Blunderbore kidnaps three women to be his brides.
22* StandardHeroReward: Jack gets to marry the princess and live HappilyEverAfter in a castle built for them by King Arthur.
23* TokenHeroicOrc: Despite Jack being the bane of giants, Jack's HonoraryUncle is a three-headed giant who provides Jack with a [[HatOfPower cap of knowledge]], an InvisibilityCloak, SprintShoes and a sword with AbsurdCuttingPower.
24* WhyDontYouJustShootHim: Blunderbore got the drop on Jack while he was sleeping, but instead of flat out killing him, he imprisons Jack to kill and eat him later.

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