The Fairy Tales of Oscar WildeAshgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007 M01 1 - 194 pages A full-length study of Oscar Wilde's two collections of children's literature, 'The Happy Prince and Other Stories' (1888) and 'The House of Pomegranates' (1891). |
Contents
THE HAPPY PRINCE AND OTHER TALES | 19 |
The Happy Prince | 21 |
The Nightingale and the Rose | 41 |
The Selfish Giant | 61 |
The Devoted Friend | 79 |
The Remarkable Rocket | 97 |
A HOUSE OF POMEGRANATES | 105 |
The Young King | 107 |
The Birthday of the Infanta | 125 |
The Fisherman and His Soul | 141 |
The StarChild | 159 |
173 | |
189 | |
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Common terms and phrases
aesthetic argues beautiful believed Catholic Church Catholicism Charles Charles Duffy Charles Stewart Parnell child children's literature Christ Christian claims colonial critics culture death devotional revolution discourse divine Dublin Dwarf economic England English fairy tale fairy tales Famine father female figure Fisherman folk-Catholicism folklore friendship garden goddess Happy Prince House of Pomegranates ibid imagery imagination Immaculate Conception Infanta Ireland Irish Famine Irish immigrants Jack Zipes Jesus King's land landlord London male Marian Marian apparitions masculinity medieval Mermaid middle-class Miller moral mother myth narrative nation nature Nightingale nineteenth century oral Oscar Wilde Parnell Philomela points political poor position priests Protestant Protestantism radical reading relationship religion religious Remarkable Rocket represents rituals rose sacrifice salvation Selfish Giant sexual simply social society soul spiritual Star-Child subversive symbolic tenant theology traditional transformation Victorian Virgin Mary W.B. Yeats Wilde's Wilde's story women worship writing Young King Zipes