The Routledge Companion to Media and Fairy-Tale Cultures

Author:   Pauline Greenhill ,  Jill Terry Rudy ,  Naomi Hamer ,  Lauren Bosc
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138946156


Pages:   664
Publication Date:   05 April 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Routledge Companion to Media and Fairy-Tale Cultures


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Full Product Details

Author:   Pauline Greenhill ,  Jill Terry Rudy ,  Naomi Hamer ,  Lauren Bosc
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   1.358kg
ISBN:  

9781138946156


ISBN 10:   113894615
Pages:   664
Publication Date:   05 April 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Basic Concepts Overview of Basic Concepts: Folklore, Fairy Tale, Culture, and Media Jill Terry Rudy Definition and History of Fairy Tales Carl Lindahl Constructing Fairy-Tale Media Forms: Texts, Textures, Contexts Vanessa Nunes and Pauline Greenhill Analytical Approaches Formalism Jill Terry Rudy Psychology Veronica Schanoes Marxism Andrew Teverson Performance Patricia Sawin and Milbre Burch Feminism Allison Craven Postmodernism Cristina Bacchilega Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and Decolonization Cristina Bacchilega and Sadhana Naithani Issues Political and Identity Issues Activism (Folktales and Social Justice: When Marvelous Tales from the Oral Tradition Help Rethink and Stir the Present from the Margins) Vivian Labrie Disability Ann Schmiesing Gender Anne Duggan Indigeneity (E Hoʻokikohoʻe iā Peʻapeʻamakawalu [Digitizing the Eight-Eyed Bat]: Indigenous Wonder Tales, Culture, and Media) ku’ualoha ho’omanawanui Orientalism (Excavation and Representation: Two Orientalist Modes in Fairy Tales) Jenny Heijun Wills Thematic Issues Adaptation and the Fairy-Tale Web Cristina Bacchilega Advertising Olivia Weigeldt Convergence Culture (Media Convergence, Convergence Culture, and Communicative Capitalism) Ida Yoshinaga Crime/Justice Sue Short Disney Corporation Lynda Haas and Shaina Trapedo Hybridity Francisco Vaz da Silva Intellectual Property John Laudun Pornography Catherine Tosenberger Storyworlds/Narratology Katharine Young Intersectional Issues Animal Studies Pauline Greenhill and Leah Claire Allen Children’s and Young Adult (YA) Literature Anna Kérchy Fandom/Fan Cultures Anne Kustritz Fat Studies (""Where Everything Round is Good:"" Exploring and Reimagining Fatness in Fairy-Tale Media) Lauren Bosc Language B. Grantham Aldred Oral Tradition Martin Lovelace Pedagogy Claudia Schwabe Sexualities/Queer and Trans Studies Pauline Greenhill Translation (Written Forms) Karen Seago Communicative Media Print William Gray Pictorial (""Such Strange Transformations:"" Burne-Jones’s Cinderella and Domestic Technologies) Molly Clark Hillard Material Culture (Fairy Tale Things: Studying Fairy Tales from a Material Culture Perspective) Meredith A. Bak Theater Jennifer Schacker Photographic Mayako Murai Cinematic Pauline Greenhill Broadcast (Radio and Television) Jill Terry Rudy Digital (""Blood and Glitter:"" Fairy Tales as Text, Texture, and Context in Digital Media) Lynne S. McNeill Expressive Genres and Venues Anime and Manga (""You Love Your Father, Don’t You?"": The Influence of Tale Type 510B on Japanese Manga/Anime) Bill Ellis Anthologies and Tale Collections Jessie Riddle Autobiography Martine Hennard Dutheil de la Rochère Blogs and Websites (Narrativizing the Daily ""Once Upon a Time:"" Re-Envisioning the Fairy-Tale Present with Fairy-Tale Blogs) Lindsay Brown Chapbooks Maria Kaliambou Children’s Museums Naomi Hamer Children’s Picture Books and Illustrations Balaka Basu Children’s Television Jodi McDavid and Ian Brodie Cinema Science Fiction John Rieder Classical Music Pauline Greenhill and Danishka Esterhazy Comics and Graphic Novels (Fairy-Tale Graphic Narrative) Emma Whatman Comic Cons (Fairy-Tale Culture and Comic Conventions: Perpetuating Storytelling Traditions) Emma Nelson Contemporary Art Amanda Slack-Smith Criticism Vanessa Joosen Fan Fiction Anne Kustritz Fantasy Ming-Hsun Lin Food (Sugar-Coated Fairy Tales and the Contemporary Cultures of Consumption) Natalia Andrievskikh Horror Sue Short Mobile Apps Cynthia Nugent Music Videos and Pop Music Rebecca Hutton and Emma Whatman Musicals Jill Terry Rudy Novels Christy Williams Opera Pauline Greenhill Poetry (Fairy-Tale Poems: The Winding Path to Illo Tempore) Michael Joseph Reality Television Vanessa Nunes Romance (The Transmedial Romance of ""Beauty and the Beast"") Tomasz Z. Majkowski and Agata Zarzycka Storytelling (Fairy Tales in Contemporary American and European Storytelling Performance) Joseph Sobol and Csenge Virág Zalka Traditional Song Pauline Greenhill and Jill Terry Rudy Television Drama (Fairy Tales and American TV Drama) Mikel Koven Video Games Emma Whatman and Victoria Tedeschi YouTube and Internet Video Brittany Warman"

Reviews

[...] the interdisciplinary mode of this text offers a fascinating and needed intervention in the field, relocating criticism of fairy tales from historically and nationally based analysis of when and where fairy tales operate and in what contexts, to how fairy tales travel across cultures and media and how this impacts the perceived function of the tales. To decouple fairy tales from their assumed spaces and relocate them within a media culture that is constantly transforming and recreating itself is a step long needed in the field of fairy-tale studies. - Michelle Anya Anjirbag, in Jeunesse, Vol 11 No 1 (2019)


"""[...] the interdisciplinary mode of this text offers a fascinating and needed intervention in the field, relocating criticism of fairy tales from historically and nationally based analysis of when and where fairy tales operate and in what contexts, to how fairy tales travel across cultures and media and how this impacts the perceived function of the tales. To decouple fairy tales from their assumed spaces and relocate them within a media culture that is constantly transforming and recreating itself is a step long needed in the field of fairy-tale studies."" - Michelle Anya Anjirbag, in Jeunesse, Vol 11 No 1 (2019)"


Author Information

Pauline Greenhill is Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Winnipeg, Canada. Jill Terry Rudy is Associate Professor of English, Brigham Young University, USA. Naomi Hamer is Assistant Professor in English at Ryerson University, Canada. Lauren Bosc is a Research Coordinator and Managing Editor for Jeunesse at the University of Winnipeg, Canada.

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