| Breaking the magic spell: Radical theories of folk and fairy tales |  | Author: Jack David Zipes Publisher: Methuen Category: Book
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 3359557
Pages: 201
ISBN: 0416010016 EAN: 9780416010015 ASIN: B0006EF5H8
Publication Date: 1984 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Older paperback edition. Text edges spotted.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description Breaking the Magic Spell, first published in 1979, is considered a landmark of the field, and this revised, expanded, and updated edition will be invaluable to scholars and students. Folk and fairy tales pervade the everyday world to such a degree that we are sometimes unaware of their enormous influence on our behavior. In seven essays collected in Breaking the Magic Spell, Zipes discusses historically and critically the evolution of folk tales as fairy tales, their influence on popular beliefs, the politics behind them, and the way they are used in mass media culture today. Zipes looks at how a wide range of authors, including the Brothers Grimm, Perrault, the German romantics, Hans Christian Andersen, Wilde, and Tolkien, used fairy tales as he assesses their enduring importance.
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| Customer Reviews:
good book January 3, 2007 3 out of 13 found this review helpful
It is very interesting and it gives you so much information about the fairy tales and the mass media industry.
Great Overview of Nonstandard Folktale Theories April 28, 2000 32 out of 33 found this review helpful
I really love Jack Zipes, and this is one of his helpful books for folklorists, and amateurs who enjoy reading fairy tales. It presents a variety of 'radical' theories about the meaning and construction of fairy tales. Many of the theories are no longer quite so radical. The book also gives you a good overview of feminist theories about the tales, some of which will surprise. Among other things, that fairy tales are not always about the subjugation of silly blond princesses. I reccomend this book as an intro to folk and fairy tale theory.
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