@article{5c6d56428b1b4381b0628dec600ba50b,
title = "Aurelia: Art and Literature Through the Mouth of the Fairy Tale",
author = "Carol Mavor",
note = "My forthcoming book, Aurelia: Art and Literature Through the Mouth of the Fairy Tale, to be published by Reaktion Books in 2016, is told with a butterfly tongue that celebrates, warns, swallows, chews and rebels. Aurelia awakens the fairy tale realm in a wide-range of authors, artists, books and objects who fall down its hole. Beyond the expected Brothers Grimm and Lewis Carroll, there are more surprising inclusions: like the gold of Ovid{\textquoteright}s Midas; the magical materiality of glass; the real and imagined beasts of a medieval manuscript ; the tragic candyland of the 1950s child-poet Minou Drouet; and the Ice Age{\textquoteright}s ivory sculpture known as the Lion Man of the Hohlenstein Stadel. This article is taken from PN Review 225, Volume 42 Number 1, September - October 2015.",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
language = "English",
volume = "42",
journal = "PN Review",
issn = "0144-7076",
number = "1",
}