Fairy Tales and the Art of Subversion: The Classical Genre for Children and the Process of Civilization
Reviewed by Lee Haring, Brooklyn College (Emeritus)
[Review length: 1140 words • Review posted on December 12, 2007]
Jack Zipes, setting forth a framework for the social history of the
literary fairy tale (10), puts the genre back into history. The fairy
tale genre, he says, consistently has a potentiality for subversion, a
word referring to the transformation of values previously associated
with the genre: what Oscar Wilde does to Hans Christian Andersen, what
Nazi Germany did to the family image in the Grimm tales, what
twentieth-century writers have done “to expand the possibilities to
question the fairy-tale discourse” (181). Seeking to fill with
historical realities the gap left by the critical agreement to
dehistoricize the fairy tale, Jack Zipes applies to this genre the
search for an ideological code propounded for European literature by
Fredric Jameson in The Political Unconscious (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1981). With its two new chapters, one on the
innovative Straparola and Basile, the other on the infamous Disney,
this important book reorders the field of fairy tale studies.