This handbook is the first-of-its-kind comprehensive overview of fantasy outside the Anglo-American hegemony. While most academic studies of fantasy follow the well-trodden path of focusing on Tolkien, Rowling, and others, our collection spotlights rich and unique fantasy literatures in India, Australia, Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, China, and many other areas of Europe, Asia, and the global South. The first part focuses on the theoretical aspects of fantasy, broadening and modifying existing definitions to accommodate the global reach of the genre. The second part contains essays illuminating specific cultures, countries, and religious or ethnic traditions. From Aboriginal myths to (self)-representation of Tibet, from the appropriation of the Polish Witcher by the American pop culture to modern Greek fantasy that does not rely on stories of Olympian deities, and from Israeli vampires to Talmudic sages, this collection is an indispensable reading for anyone interested in fantasy fiction and global literature.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Fantasy as Genre: On Defining the Field of Study. - 2. Allotopia: World-Building in Fantasy. - 3. Bio-Cultural Taxonomy. - 4. A Thousand and one Book: A Cross Cultural Approach to serialized fantasy. - 5. Children s Crosshatch Fantasy: Disturbing Portals, Crises and Comings-of-Age. - 6. Hybrid Secondary Worlds: Animal Fantasy. - 7. " How did you go about saving a city? She googled it" : Urban Fantasy Cities as Communities of citizens. - 8. Punk Subculture in Urban Fantasy: Life on the Border. - 9. History and Other (Colonial) Fantasies: Indigenous Time play in Cleverman. - 10. Chinese Danmei: Male-Male Romance, Women s Fantasy, and the Feminization of Labor in the Digital Age. - 11. Between Scylla & Charybdis: A Survey of Greece Fantasy Fiction. - 12. Re-imagining Hindu Mythology in the 21st Century: Amish Tripathi and Indian Fantasy Fiction in English. - 13. Looking for an Italian-Style Fantasy. - 14. Wilderness as Wonderland: Talmudic Stories and Modern Israeli Fantasy. - 15. Israeli Fantasy and Science Fiction: Fantastical Chronotopes and The Modern Promised Land. - 16. The Little Red Gloves: Apocalyptic Fantasy and the Bodhisattva of Mercy in a Japanese Picture Book on Hiroshima. - 17. Latin American Fantasy as Heterogeneous: Between Neomedievalism and LatinAmericanism. - 18. Cultural Appropriation of Poland s Fantasy: The Cold War Saga o Wied minie Moving into American Mainstream Culture. - 19. Syncretism in Russian fantasy. - 20. Mystification, Religious Imagery and Fantasy in Modern Tibetan Literature.
The editors of The Palgrave Handbook of Global Fantasy have offered a substantive work that fills an important gap in the scholarly exploration of fantasy literature through their aptly-named volume. The essays contained therein examine a wide variety of fantasy texts written by diverse, non- Anglo-American authors from around the globe. The concepts discussed are, unsurprisingly, contextualized in global terms throughout the text. Scholars and students of fantasy would do well to engage with these provocations. (Mark A. Fabrizi, Anglistik, Vol. 35 (1), 2024)
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