Description
About the Author
Vito Carrassi is a writer and translator who teaches folklore at the University of Bari. His main fields of research are literary anthropology, narratology, Irish and Italian folklore.
Reviews
Carrassi (University of Bari, Italy) contributes to the ever-burgeoning field of fairy tale studies with a densely packed volume that reveals various influences, including narratology, structuralism, archetypal criticism, and Catholicism. His focus is the fairy tale in Ireland from the Celtic period through the Irish Revival to James Joyce. But Carrassi's goal is to go beyond the regional and interrogate and then redefine the fairy tale genre itself. His aim, he writes, 'is to analyze the relationships that, in a determined space-time context, have been created between two opposed ambits of the narrative tradition ... the oral and popular components and the written and cultured.' Relying heavily on the foundational works of the field (by, for example, Max Luthi, Vladimir Propp, Stith Thompson, and Tzvetan Todorov), Carrassi shuns more recent approaches, such as feminist and Marxist analyses. Focusing on what he terms the 'narrative patrimony' of Ireland and the 'congenital narrativity' of the Irish people, he hypothesizes about the process of composition, the meta-narrativity, and the meanings of the traditional tales. Summing Up: Recommended. * CHOICE *
Book Information
ISBN 9781611493801
Author Vito Carrassi
Format Paperback
Page Count 218
Imprint John Cabot University Press
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 340g
Dimensions(mm) 230mm * 154mm * 14mm