Pushkin wrote the tale in autumn
1833 and it was first published in the literary magazine
Biblioteka dlya chteniya in May
1835.
Grimms' Tales Several notable scholars believe that Pushkin's is an original tale based on the Grimms' tale, "
The Fisherman and His Wife".
Mark Azadovsky wrote monumental articles on Pushkin's sources, his nurse "Arina Rodionovna", and the "Brothers Grimm" demonstrating that tales recited to Pushkin in his youth were often recent translations propagated "word of mouth to a largely unlettered peasantry", rather than tales passed down in Russia, as
John Bayley explains. Still, in Bayley's estimation, the derivative nature does not diminish the reader's ability to appreciate "
The Fisherman and the Fish" as "pure folklore", though at a lesser scale than other masterpieces. In a similar vein, emphatically accepted Azadovsky's verdict on Pushkin's use of Grimm material, but emphasized that Pushkin still crafted Russian fairy tales out of them. In a draft version, Pushkin has the fisherman's wife wishing to be the
Roman Pope, thus betraying his influence from the Brother Grimms' telling, where the wife also aspires to be a she-Pope.
Afanasyev's collection The tale is also very similar in plot and motif to the folktale "The Goldfish" () which is No. 75 in
Alexander Afanasyev's collection (1855–1867), which is obscure as to its collected source. Russian scholarship abounds in discussion of the interrelationship between Pushkin's verse and Afanasyev's
skazka. Pushkin had been shown
Vladimir Dal's collection of folktales. He seriously studied genuine folktales, and literary style was spawned from absorbing them, but conversely, popular tellings were influenced by Pushkin's published versions also. At any rate, after
Norbert Guterman's English translation of Asfaneyev's "The Goldfish" (1945) appeared,
Stith Thompson included it in his
One Hundred Favorite Folktales, so this version became the referential Russian variant for the
ATU 555 tale type.
English translations In 2012,
Robert Chandler published an English translation,
A Tale about a Fisherman and a Fish (2012). ==Plot summary==