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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.21066/carcl.libri.2017-06(01).0003

Visions of “Blighty”: Fairies, War and Fragile Spaces

Maggie Atkinson ; Memorial University of Newfoundland – Grenfell Campus, Corner Brook, Canada


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Abstract

Estella Canziani’s fairy painting, “Where the Little Things of the Woodland Live Unseen” (1914) was informed by her fascination with the landscape and folklore. This paper explores the relationship between the sociocultural and psychological condition of English society during WWI and the enthusiastic reception of reproductions of Canziani’s painting. Her picture is analysed in relation to the revived popularity of J.M. Barrie’s protagonist Peter Pan and the proliferation of recruitment propaganda that inundated the British public during WWI. Canziani’s image located as a site across which viewers enacted self-interpretive, interrogative relationships between self/environment and reality/the imaginary is also positioned as key for a culture that fabricated a contemporary, mythologically based, omnipotent champion to personify English notions of the heroic soldier. In addition, the androgynous appearance of Canziani’s piper disrupts socially constituted positions of gender difference in English society that, with the onset of WWI, challenged and distorted gendered boundaries.

Keywords

Estella Canziani; fairy painting; WWI; Peter Pan; conscription posters

Hrčak ID:

188302

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/188302

Publication date:

25.9.2017.

Article data in other languages: croatian german

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