textWhen an individual, usually a man, is attracted to another, usually a woman, from another country or lower social class, he deals with potentially dangerous desires by declaring her a supernatural creature, a strategy that I term “folklore-naming,” distinct from “folklore-narrating,” or telling stories about the fantastic. Many in nineteenth-century England feared that the Irish, Jews, working-class girls, governesses, spinsters and the insane were corrupting national purity. In response to such anxieties about the security of sexual, racial, class, and/or national status, a character employs folktale, fairy tale, or myth to alleviate discomfort. Yet terms like “fairy” are peculiar nicknames since these beings can be helpful an...
Although the fairy tales by Charles Perrault and the Grimms are widely recognized today, hundreds of...
This essay involves two ‘borders’. The first is the border of gender, between male poet and female s...
This project will explore the emergence of “heroinism,” a uniquely feminine way in which early femal...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001This dissertation reveals the important role of folk ...
Sowing Seeds of Subversion: Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers\u27 Subversive Use of Fairy Tal...
Through the ages, and within myriad cultural contexts, fairytales and folklore have taught children ...
Victorian academic folklore often had a complicated relationship with fairy-lore, especially those w...
The focus of this thesis is the supernatural ballads of northern Europe and, in particular, how we c...
Δεν παρατίθεται περίληψη.Taking it for granted that the people who lived in the so-called traditiona...
In my dissertation, “Monstrous Femininities: Elizabethan Influence on Nineteenth-Century Literature,...
In late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century fiction, Puritans serve as source material for a di...
This chapter identifies a wave of contemporary British fiction in which Folk Horror is redefined fro...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
"Folklore is the unofficial culture of a society that changes over time and often reflects what a so...
This study examines stories from the 1800s about the Swedish folklore creature Näcken with the purpo...
Although the fairy tales by Charles Perrault and the Grimms are widely recognized today, hundreds of...
This essay involves two ‘borders’. The first is the border of gender, between male poet and female s...
This project will explore the emergence of “heroinism,” a uniquely feminine way in which early femal...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001This dissertation reveals the important role of folk ...
Sowing Seeds of Subversion: Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers\u27 Subversive Use of Fairy Tal...
Through the ages, and within myriad cultural contexts, fairytales and folklore have taught children ...
Victorian academic folklore often had a complicated relationship with fairy-lore, especially those w...
The focus of this thesis is the supernatural ballads of northern Europe and, in particular, how we c...
Δεν παρατίθεται περίληψη.Taking it for granted that the people who lived in the so-called traditiona...
In my dissertation, “Monstrous Femininities: Elizabethan Influence on Nineteenth-Century Literature,...
In late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century fiction, Puritans serve as source material for a di...
This chapter identifies a wave of contemporary British fiction in which Folk Horror is redefined fro...
This thesis argues that the flâneuse is present in literature well before the late nineteenth centur...
"Folklore is the unofficial culture of a society that changes over time and often reflects what a so...
This study examines stories from the 1800s about the Swedish folklore creature Näcken with the purpo...
Although the fairy tales by Charles Perrault and the Grimms are widely recognized today, hundreds of...
This essay involves two ‘borders’. The first is the border of gender, between male poet and female s...
This project will explore the emergence of “heroinism,” a uniquely feminine way in which early femal...