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Fairies in nineteenth-century art and literature

Part of the Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture series
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Although fairies are now banished to the realm of childhood, these diminutive figures were central to the work of many Victorian painters, novelists, poets and even scientists.

It would be no exaggeration to say that the Victorians were obsessed with fairies: yet this obsession has hitherto received little scholarly attention.

Nicola Bown reminds us of the importance of fairies in Victorian culture.

In the figure of the fairy, the Victorians crystallized contemporary anxieties about the effects of industrialization, the remoteness of the past, the value of culture and the way in which science threatened to undermine religion and spirituality.

Above all, the fairy symbolized disenchantment with the irresistible forces of progress and modernity.

As these forces stripped the world of its wonder, the Victorians consoled themselves by dreaming of a place and a people suffused with the enchantment that was disappearing from their own lives.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521025508 / 9780521025508
Paperback / softback
700.475
30/03/2006
United Kingdom
English
xiii, 235 p. : ill.
23 cm
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Reprint. Originally published: 2001.