Skip to content

The Enchanted Boot

Nancy L. Canepa

Italian Fairy Tales & Their Tellers

Barcode 9780814334751
Paperback

Original price £33.82 - Original price £33.82
Original price
£33.82
£33.82 - £33.82
Current price £33.82

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Low Stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 29/11/2022

Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: Wayne State University Press
Series: Donald Haase Series in Fairy-Tale Studies
Contributors: Nancy L. Canepa (Edited and translated by)
Language: English
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Pages: 448

Italian Fairy Tales & Their Tellers
The authors featured in this volume have, over the centuries, explored and interrogated the intersections between elite and popular cultures and oral and literary narratives, just as they have investigated the ways in which fairy tales have been and continue to be rewritten as expressions of both collective identities and individual sensibilities.
This comprehensive collection of Italian tales in English encourages a revisitation of the fairy-tale canon in light of some of the most fascinating material that has often been excluded from it. In the United States, we tend to associate fairy tales with children and are most familiar with the tales of the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Anderson, and Disney. But the first literary fairy tales appeared in Renaissance Italy, and long before the Grimms there was already a rich and sophisticated tradition that included hundreds of tales, including many of those today considered "classic." The authors featured in this volume have, over the centuries, explored and interrogated the intersections between elite and popular cultures and oral and literary narratives, just as they have investigated the ways in which fairy tales have been and continue to be rewritten as expressions of both collective identities and individual sensibilities. The fairy tale in its Italian incarnations provides a striking example of how this genre is a potent vehicle for expressing cultural aspirations and anxieties as well as for imagining different ways of narrating shared futures.