Fairy-Tale Revivals in the Long Nineteenth Century, Volume II

ebook Fairy- Tale Revival Dramas: Writing Wonder in Transatlantic Ethnic Literary Revivals, 1850–1950

By Abigail Heiniger

cover image of Fairy-Tale Revivals in the Long Nineteenth Century, Volume II

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Volume two explores the way a wide range of classic princess tales written by marginalized writers. Rapunzel and Snow White, with their pale skin or long ropes of golden hair, are particularly popular vehicles for exploring and challenging racialized constructions of beauty. Marriage is the traditional vehicle of a happy ending in Princess tales, so marginalized responses to these tales also inherently respond to the doubly colonized position of women in the Anglophone world. The institution of marriage typically exposes the institutional oppression of colonized women. Authors include Charles Chesnutt, Jessie Fauset, Julia Kavanaugh, George Edwards, some of the unpublished manuscripts of Jewish-Australian author Joseph Jacobs, and the earliest work of Sinèad de Valera, as well as fin-de-siècle illustrators such as Harry Clarke, and collected oral tales.

Fairy-Tale Revivals in the Long Nineteenth Century, Volume II