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The Pleasures of Metamorphosis - Japanese and English Fairy-Tale Transformations of ""The Little Mermaid (Paperback)
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The Pleasures of Metamorphosis - Japanese and English Fairy-Tale Transformations of ""The Little Mermaid (Paperback)
Series: Series in Fairy-Tale Studies
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Lucy Fraser's The Pleasures of Metamorphosis: Japanese and English
Fairy Tale Transformations of "The Little Mermaid" explores
Japanese and English transformations of Hans Christian Andersen's
1837 Danish fairy tale "The Little Mermaid" by focusing on pleasure
as a means to analyze the huge variety of texts that transform a
canonical fairy tale such as Andersen's. Fraser examines over
twenty Japanese and English transformations, including literary
texts, illustrated books, films, and television series. This
monograph also draws upon criticism in both Japanese and English,
meeting a need in Western fairy-tale studies for more culturally
diverse perspectives. Fraser provides a model for critical
cross-cultural fairy tale analysis in her examination of the
journey of a single fairy tale across two languages. The book
begins with the various approaches to reading and writing fairy
tales, with a history of "The Little Mermaid" in Japanese and
English culture. Disney's The Little Mermaid and Studio Ghibli's
Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea are discussed as examples that
simulate pleasurable physical experiences through animation's tools
of music and voice, and visual effects of movement and
metamorphosis. Fraser then explores the literary effects of the
fairy tale by male authors, such as Oscar Wilde, Tanizaki
Jun'ichiro, and Abe Kobo, who invoke familiar fairy-tale
conventions and delineate some of the pleasures of what can be
painful enchantment with a mermaid or with the fairy tale itself.
The author examines the portrayals of the mermaid in three short
stories by Matsumoto Yuko, Kurahashi Yumiko, and Ogawa Yoko,
engaging with familiar fairy tales, reference to fairy-tale
research, and reflections on the immersive experience of reading.
Women characters and authors are also hyperaware of the possible
meanings of Andersen's "The Little Mermaid" and of the fairy tale
itself, furthering the discussion with Nonaka Hiiragi's novel
Ningyo-hime no kutsu, and D[di?]'s novel Sento no ningyo-hime to
majo no mori, as well as an episode of the science fiction
television series Dark Angel. Fraser concludes that the "pleasure"
framework is useful for a cross-cultural study of creative
engagements with and transformations of a particular fairy tale.
Few studies have examined Japanese fairy-tale transformations to
the extent that Fraser has, presenting fascinating information that
will intrigue fairy-tale scholars and those wanting to learn more
about the representation of pleasure behind the imaginative and
fantastical.
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