Tales of the Fairies, and of the Ghost-World

Tales of the Fairies, and of the Ghost-World

Author: Jeremiah Curtin

Publisher: Wildside Press LLC

Published: 2019-04-23

Total Pages: 211

ISBN-13: 1479443190

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Collected from the oral tradition in South-West Munster, England, here are tales of the fairy-folk and ghosts passed down through the generations through oral story-telling.


Irish Tales of the Fairies and the Ghost World

Irish Tales of the Fairies and the Ghost World

Author: Jeremiah Curtin

Publisher: Courier Corporation

Published: 2000-01-01

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13: 9780486411392

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Thirty beguiling stories of sprites and specters told to a Smithsonian ethnographer in 19th-century Ireland. "The Ghost of Sneem," "Tom Moore and the Seal Woman," "The Blood-Drawing Ghost," many more.


A History of Irish Fairies

A History of Irish Fairies

Author: Carolyn White

Publisher: Carroll & Graf Publishers

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 123

ISBN-13: 9780786715398

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A rich compendium of information on Irish fairies covers a wide range of related issues, including clothes and appearance, immortality, personality, and demonic powers of cluricauns, leprechauns, Silkies, Banshees, and Pookas.


Strange and Secret Peoples

Strange and Secret Peoples

Author: Carole G. Silver

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2000-10-12

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 0190286830

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Teeming with creatures, both real and imagined, this encyclopedic study in cultural history illuminates the hidden web of connections between the Victorian fascination with fairies and their lore and the dominant preoccupations of Victorian culture at large. Carole Silver here draws on sources ranging from the anthropological, folkloric, and occult to the legal, historical, and medical. She is the first to anatomize a world peopled by strange beings who have infiltrated both the literary and visual masterpieces and the minor works of the writers and painters of that era. Examining the period of 1798 to 1923, Strange and Secret Peoples focuses not only on such popular literary figures as Charles Dickens and William Butler Yeats, but on writers as diverse as Thomas Carlyle, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Charlotte Mew; on artists as varied as mad Richard Dadd, Aubrey Beardsley, and Sir Joseph Noel Paton; and on artifacts ranging from fossil skulls to photographs and vases. Silver demonstrates how beautiful and monstrous creatures--fairies and swan maidens, goblins and dwarfs, cretins and changelings, elementals and pygmies--simultaneously peopled the Victorian imagination and inhabited nineteenth-century science and belief. Her book reveals the astonishing complexity and fertility of the Victorian consciousness: its modernity and antiquity, its desire to naturalize the supernatural, its pervasive eroticism fused with sexual anxiety, and its drive for racial and imperial dominion.


Kate Culhane

Kate Culhane

Author:

Publisher: Chronicle Books

Published: 2001-07

Total Pages: 48

ISBN-13: 9781587170591

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After disturbing a dead man in his grave an Irish girl nearly pays with her life, but thanks to her cleverness and bravery she finds love and riches instead.


Fairies, Fractious Women, and the Old Faith

Fairies, Fractious Women, and the Old Faith

Author: Regina Buccola

Publisher: Susquehanna University Press

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 306

ISBN-13: 9781575911038

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Fairies, unruly women, and vestigial Catholicism constituted a frequently invoked triad in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century drama which has seldom been critically examined and therefore constitutes a significant lacuna in scholarly treatments of early modern theater, including the work of Shakespeare. Fairy tradition has lost out in scholarly critical convention to the more masculine mythologies of Christianity and classical Greece and Rome, in which female deities either serve masculine gods or are themselves masculinized (i.e., Diana as a buckskinned warrior). However, the fairy tradition is every bit as significant in our critical attempts to situate early modern texts in their historical contexts as the references to classical texts and struggles associated with state-mandated religious beliefs are widely agreed to be. fairy, rebellious woman, quasi-Catholic trio repeatedly stages resistance to early modern conceptions of appropriate class and gender conduct and state-mandated religion in A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Cymbeline, All's Well That Ends Well, and Ben Jonson's The Alchemist.