Tale type The tale is classified as the
East Slavic type SUS 327C, F, (
ru), of the East Slavic Folktale Classification (). In type SUS 327C, the witch disguises her voice to lure the hero (a young boy) to her lair; while trying to cook him, the boy dupes her and throws her (or her daughter) in the oven, and he escapes with the help of a flock of swan geese. In type SUS 327F, the boy is on a fishing boat and is tricked by the witch, who altered her voice. In this lens, Petro Lintur suggested that the Belarusian and Russian variants, wherein the young hero is named Telesik, Ivasik or Tereshechka, are "closely linked" to Ukrainian tales of type 327C. A similar Belarusian fairy tale is . The East Slavic types correspond to two tale types of the international
Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index: ATU 327C, "The Devil (Witch) Carries the Hero Home in a Sack", and ATU 327F, "The Witch and the Fisher Boy", which are usual combinations to each other.
Interpretation Ukrainian folklorist Viktor Davidyuk explained the meaning of the fairy tale as a cultural lesson about to which family a person belongs. Ivasyk-Telesyk could express belonging by responding to the "mother's voice". This relation indicates that the roots of the fairy tale may lie in the era of matriarchy, when the definition of parentage was relative to the mother. Another possible meaning is a cultural discouragement on revealing the magical meaning of one's words to outsiders. == In popular culture ==