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Contributions by Kelly Blewett, Claudia Camicia, Alisa Clapp-Itnyre, Lisa Rowe Fraustino, Elisabeth Graves, Karlie Herndon, KaaVonia Hinton, Holly Blackford Humes, Melanie Hurley, Kara K. Keeling, Maleeha Malik, Claudia Mills, Elena Paruolo, Scott T. Pollard, Jiwon Rim, Paige Sammartino, Adrianna Zabrzewska, and Wenduo Zhang

First published in 1922 to immediate popularity, The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams has never been out of print. The story has been adapted for film, television, and theater across a range of mediums including animation, claymation, live action, musical, and dance. Frequently, the story inspires a sentimental, nostalgic responseas well as a corresponding dismissive response from critics. It is surprising that, despite its longevity and popularity, The Velveteen Rabbit has inspired a relatively thin dossier of serious literary scholarship, a gap that this volume seeks to correct.

While each essay can stand alone, the chapters in "The Velveteen Rabbit" at 100 flow in a coherent sequence from beginning to end, showing connections between readings from a wide array of critical approaches. Philosophical and cultural studies lead us to consider the meaning of love and reality in ways both timeless and temporal. The Velveteen Rabbit is an Anthropocene Rabbit. He is also disabled. Here a traditional exegetical reading sits alongside queering the text. Collectively, these essays more than double the amount of serious scholarship on The Velveteen Rabbit. Combining hindsight with evolving sensibilities about representation, the contributors offer thirteen ways of looking at this Rabbit that Margery Williams gave usways that we can also use to look at other classic storybooks.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. The Velveteen Rabbit at 100 3(20)
Lisa Rowe Fraustino
Chapter 1 Virtual Realities: Animation and Simulacrum in The Velveteen Rabbit's Tradition and Legacy
23(15)
Holly Blackford Humes
Chapter 2 Visualizing Velveteen: Original Illustrations and Subsequent Adaptations
38(24)
Kelly Blewett
Alisa Clapp-Itnyre
Chapter 3 Plush, Plastic, and Plato: Purpose and Being in The Velveteen Rabbit and Toy Story
62(16)
Melanie Hurley
Chapter 4 Personhood and Love: Interrogating "Realness" in The Velveteen Rabbit
78(12)
Claudia Mills
Chapter 5 Becoming Real through Matter That Matters: An Onto-Epistemological Analysis of The Velveteen Rabbit
90(13)
Adrianna Zabrzewska
Chapter 6 "Real" Stuffed Animals: Rabbit Tales in the Anthropocene
103(11)
Jiwon Rim
Chapter 7 Illustrations and the Eco-Reality of The Velveteen Rabbit
114(16)
Wenduo Zhang
Chapter 8 The Velveteen Rabbit in Italy
130(26)
Claudia Camicia
Elena Paruolo
Chapter 9 Boy Caretaking and Authority in a Twenty-First-Century Fairy Tale
156(10)
Paige Sammartino
Chapter 10 Born-Again Bunnies: The Velveteen Rabbit, Edward Tulane, and Redemptive Love
166(15)
Maleeha Malik
Elisabeth Graves
Lisa Rowe Fraustino
Chapter 11 "For Nursery Magic Is Very Strange and Wonderful": The Queer Space of the Nursery in The Velveteen Rabbit
181(16)
Karlie Herndon
Chapter 12 Metamorphosis: The Disabled Toy Made "Real" as an Eternally Abled Rabbit
197(14)
Scott T. Pollard
Kara K. Keeling
Chapter 13 Whiteness and the Selective Tradition in The Velveteen Rabbit
211(18)
Kaavonia Hinton
About the Contributors 229(6)
Index 235
Lisa Rowe Fraustino edits the journal Childrens Literature and directs the graduate programs in childrens literature at Hollins University. With Karen Coats, she coedited Mothers in Childrens and Young Adult Literature: From the Eighteenth Century to Postfeminism, published by University Press of Mississippi and winner of the 2018 Edited Book Award of the Childrens Literature Association.