"This open access book explores how and to what extent fairy tales and their modern adaptations from literature, film and television are put to work for justice in the areas ecology, kinship, disability, space and place, and gender. Guided by theorizing in fields including ecological, gender, disability, critical race, Indigenous, genre, posthuman, adaptation, folk and fairy tales studies, it interrogates a range of international works such The Magic Fish, Paddington, Babine, The Shape of Water and The Dragon Prince"--
"This open access book explores how and to what extent fairy tales and their modern adaptations from literature, film and television are put to work for justice in the areas ecology, kinship, disability, space and place, and gender. Guided by theorizing in fields including ecological, gender, disability, critical race, Indigenous, genre, posthuman, adaptation, folk and fairy tales studies, it interrogates a range of international works such The Magic Fish, Paddington, Babine, The Shape of Water and The Dragon Prince"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Cristina Bacchilega is Professor Emerita of English at the University of Hawaii-Manoa, USA, and coeditor of Marvels & Tales: Journal of Fairy-Tale Studies. Her recent works include Inviting Interruptions: Wonder Tales in the 21st Century, coedited with Jennifer Orme, and publications in Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts and Narrative Culture. Pauline Greenhill is Professor of Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Winnipeg, Canada. She has received grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Her publications include The Routledge Companion to Media and Fairy-Tale Cultures, co-edited with Jill Terry Rudy, Naomi Hamer, and Lauren Bosc (2018), and essays in Signs, parallax, Theoretical Criminology, Studies in European Cinema, and Law, Culture and the Humanities.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Credits 1. Tales of the Otherwise 2. Storyworld Thinking and Fairy-Tale Relationality: Greed and Its Discontents 3. Justice for Monsters: Toward a Popular Green Criminology of "Little Red Riding Hood" 4. Finding Oneself Between Species: Hybrid Creatures and Kinship 5. Spirited Borders: Wonder Genres and Decolonial Hauntologies 6. Fairy-Tale Mixing: Reanimation Wanted for Better Futures 7. Epilogue: The Fairy Tale's "What If?" and Wonder Media for Justice Bibliography Mediagraphy Index
Acknowledgements Credits 1. Tales of the Otherwise 2. Storyworld Thinking and Fairy-Tale Relationality: Greed and Its Discontents 3. Justice for Monsters: Toward a Popular Green Criminology of "Little Red Riding Hood" 4. Finding Oneself Between Species: Hybrid Creatures and Kinship 5. Spirited Borders: Wonder Genres and Decolonial Hauntologies 6. Fairy-Tale Mixing: Reanimation Wanted for Better Futures 7. Epilogue: The Fairy Tale's "What If?" and Wonder Media for Justice Bibliography Mediagraphy Index
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