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Category Archives: Books and Articles
Victorian fairytales and folklore: round up
More here on nineteenth-century fairy tales and folklore. Lucy Scholes reviews a book on folklore studies from the period, an anthology of Victorian literary fairy tales, and a book on the relationship between the genre and science.
Posted in Books and Articles, Reviews
Tagged Fairy tales, Folklore, Victorian literature
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Frankenstein and Fantasmagoriana
This is the first of three very interesting articles by Maximiliaan van Woudenberg on an important source of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein–the collection of ghost stories in Fantasmagoriana (1812).
Posted in Books and Articles, Critical thoughts, Resources
Tagged Fantasmagoriana, Frankenstein, Ghosts, Mary Shelley
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Folklore and Modern Irish Writing, by Anne Markey and Anne O’Connor
This book on Irish folklore and modern Irish writing looks very useful for those who, like myself, are fascinated by the way that folk tales can be endlessly reworked to give contemporary significance to old narrative structures and content.
Posted in Books and Articles, Reviews
Tagged adaptation, Celtic, Fairy tales, Folklore, Intertextuality, Irish literature, Yeats
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Otranto: Gothic articles and resources
Otranto is a marvellous new project for publishing peer-reviewd online articles on the Gothic.
Maria Tatar, ’10 Lesser-Known Fairy Tales That Should Get More Love’
Some of these tales I had heard of; others not, and my curiosity has been strongly stirred. The expert on folklore Maria Tatar gives a precis here of a variety of vivid tales from Italy, Japan, West Africa, and elsewhere … Continue reading
Posted in Books and Articles, Resources
Tagged Basile, Calvino, Fairy tales, Grimm brothers, Hans Andersen, Maria Tatar
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Michael Dirda reviews five fairy-tale books
A review of new books on the fairy tale by Marina Warner and Jack Zipes (including the first translation into English of the first edition of Grimm’s Tales), but also of two books from Princeton University Press’s Oddly Modern Fairy … Continue reading
Posted in Books and Articles, Reading Lists, Reviews
Tagged adaptation, Fairy tales, Grimm brothers, Jack Zipes, Marina Warner, Wolves
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Rowan Williams: why we need fairy tales now more than ever
Rowan Williams reviews Marina Warner’s new book, Jack Zipes’s translation of the Grimms, and Malcolm Lyons’s translation of early Arabic wonder tales, and discusses the power of the fairy tale in a fascinating essay-review.
Alexandra Campbell, ‘Review: Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood: Bloodlines’
Alexandra Campbell, PhD student at the University of Glasgow, succinctly reviews here what looks to be an essential contribution to the critical literature on the vampire in literature and other media: Aspasia Stephanou’s book, Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood: Bloodlines, … Continue reading
Posted in Books and Articles, Reviews
Tagged Blade, blood, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Film, Gothic, John Polidori, Marx, race, science, sexuality, technology, True Blood, TV, Twilight, Ultraviolet, Underworld, Vampire Diaries, Vampires, Victorian Gothic
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Dale Townshend, ‘Review of Elisabeth Bronfen’s Night Passages: Philosophy, Literature, Film’
Dale Townshend, University of Stirling, gives a thoughtfully analytical review of Elisabeth Bronfen’s Night Passages: Philosophy, Literature, Film, which itself looks a very interesting exploration of Gothic themes, in particular the image of Night, as the underside of Enlightenment in … Continue reading
Rebecca Williams, Post-Object Fandom Television, Identity and Self-narrative
OGOM contributor Rebecca Williams‘s new book, Post-Object Fandom Television, Identity and Self-narrative, on TV fandom from Bloomsbury looks exciting: Fandom is generally viewed as an integral part of everyday life which impacts upon how we form emotional bonds with ourselves and … Continue reading
Posted in Books and Articles, Publications
Tagged Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dr Who, fandom, Firefly, TV
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