Jack ZipesThe Enchanted Screen
The Unknown History of Fairy-Tale Films
Jack Zipes is Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota. An acclaimed translator and scholar of children's literature and culture, his most recent books include Relentless Progress: The Reconfiguration of Children's Literature, Fairy Tales, and Storytelling; The Collected Sicilian Folk and Fairy Tales of Giuseppe Pitré; Why Fairy Tales Stick; Hans Christian Andersen: The Misunderstood Storyteller, Beautiful Angiola; and The Robber with the Witch's Head, all published by Routledge.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Part I
1. Filmic Adaptation and Appropriation of the Fairy Tale
2. De-Disneyfying Disney: Notes on the Development of the Fairy-Tale Film
3. Georges Méliès: Pioneer of the Fairy-Tale Film and the Art of the
Ridiculous
4. Animated Fairy-tale Cartoons: Celebrating the Carnival Art of the
Ridiculous
5. Animated Feature Fairy-Tale Films
Part II
6. Cracking the Magic Mirror: Re-Presentations of Snow White
7. The Trials and Tribulations of Little Red Riding Hood Revisited and
Reviewed
8. Bluebeard's Original Sin and the Rise of Serial Killing, Mass Murder,
and Fascism
9. The Triumph of the Underdog: Cinderelläs Legacy
10. Abusing and Abandoning Children: "Hansel and Gretel," "Tom Thumb," "The
Pied Piper," "Donkey-Skin," and "The Juniper Tree"
11. Choosing the Right Mate: Why Beasts and Frogs Make for Ideal Husbands
12. Andersen¿s Cinematic Legacy: Trivialization and Innovation
Part III
13. Adapting Fairy-Tale Novels
14. Between Slave Language and Utopian Optimism: Neglected Fairy-Tale Films
of Central and Eastern Europe
15. Fairy-Tale Films in Dark Times: Breaking Molds, Seeing the World Anew
Bibliography
Filmography