Beyond the looking-glass

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Author: Daniel Hahn
Date: June 4, 2016
From: Spectator(Vol. 331, Issue 9797)
Publisher: The Spectator Ltd. (UK)
Document Type: Book review
Length: 850 words

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Children's Fantasy Literature: An Introduction

by Michael Levy and Farah Mendlesohn

CUP, 16.99 [pounds sterling], pp. 274, ISBN 9781107610293

First Light: A Celebration of Alan Garner

edited by Erica Wagner

Unbound, 20 [pounds sterling], pp. 302, ISBN 9781783522521

Children's fantasy literature has never been just one thing. Animal fables, folk and fairy tales were not originally intended for a child audience, while the relatively recent phenomenon that is entertaining (rather than principally didactic) children's literature has many origins that are not fantastic at all. Michael Levy and Farah Mendlesohn draw a line--well, many lines--from these assorted beginnings to today's world, in which fantasy specifically aimed at young readers is a large and noisy part of the publishing market, but still very far from a single coherent one.

Much of the category's mutation over the centuries can be explained contextually: political pressures, economic changes, advances in gender politics and shifts in attitudes towards religion all play a role. These include loss of an empire, the aftermath of a brutal war, the anxieties of a nation seeking to define itself (think of L. Frank Baum's America, or T.H. White's Britain) and crucially, unsurprisingly, how we think of children, and what we expect from them. Levy and Mendlesohn give a convincing explanation for a distinctively...

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