A new collection of subversive French fairy tales
The wolf is tricked by Red Riding Hood into strangling her grandmother
and is subsequently arrested. Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella do not live
happily ever after. And the fairies are saucy, angry, and capricious.
Fairy Tales for the Disillusioned collects thirty-six tales, most
newly translated, by writers associated with the decadent literary
movement that flourished in late nineteenth-century France. These
enchanting yet troubling stories reflect the concerns and fascinations
of a time of great political, social, and cultural change. Recasting
well-known favorites from classic French fairy tales, as well as
Arthurian legends and English and German tales, these decadent fairy
tales feature perverse settings and disillusioned perspectives,
underlining such themes as the decline of civilization, the degeneration
of magic and the unreal, gender confusion, and the incursion of the
industrial. Complete with an informative introduction, biographical
notes for each author, and explanatory notes throughout, these
subversive tales will entertain and startle even the most disenchanted
readers.