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E-raamat: Play of Belief in Nineteenth-Century Fairy Tales and Fairy Narratives

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The Play of Belief in Nineteenth-Century Fairy Tales and Fairy Narratives examines the range of playful negotiations with truth claims in British and American fantasies for children of the nineteenth century within the context of the eras ebbing Christian commitments and competing forces for belief and disenchantment.

While Victorian culture was broadly Christian, its fantasy literature for children shed the explicit piety of writers of earlier generations to embrace magical tales of many stripes. In many ways the story of childrens literature in the nineteenth century is one of a Christian culture disinheriting itself, turning its angels into fairies, its faith into a range of doubts, and blending its Christian ethics with progressive evolutionary ideals. The study shows how authors embraced a wide variety of rhetorical and narrative strategies by which play, ambiguity, and hesitation could suggest what is or is not real. Inevitably, such strategies brought disenchantment in their wake, for the more Victorian authors foregrounded the problem of belief, the more they betrayed the nervousness of their own affirmations, especially in the glut of sentiment and frenzied fantasy which typifies fin de siècle fairy tales.

This essential study illuminates the historical nature of childrens literature, making it indispensable reading for scholars of Victorian culture, children's fantasy, and anyone fascinated by the enduring power of fairy tales.

Arvustused

Laura White provides a compelling and prodigious study of how Victorian fairy stories and fantasies respond to and help work through the growing disenchantment with spiritual and religious belief in the nineteenth century. Her command of a vast number of literary works shows how childrens reading reckoned with the effects of modernity on spiritualism, imagination, and play.

Eric L. Tribunella, University of Southern Mississippi

List of Illustrations
Preface

Introduction

Chapter
1. Truth Claims in Two Cases of Nineteenth-Century Fairy
Representations

Truth Claims

Chapter
2. Managing the Play of Belief within Childrens Fantasies

Chapter
3. The Two Poles of Fantastic Suggestion: Beautiful Hesitations and
the Object Lesson

Chapter
4. Believing in Things

Chapter
5. Nineteenth-Century American Fairy Tales: Exceptional Fantasies and
the Gigantic

Coda

Bibliography

Index
Laura White is the John E. Weaver Professor of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She has published widely on nineteenth-century subjects and is the author of Romance, Language, and Education in Jane Austens Novels (1988), Jane Austens Anglicanism (2010), and The Alice Books and the Contested Ground of the Natural World (2017) as well as the PI for Austen Said: Patterns of Diction in Jane Austens Novels.