• Re: Celtic themes in fantasy literature

    From David Dalton@21:1/5 to Steve Hayes on Tue Aug 15 00:54:53 2023
    XPost: alt.mythology, alt.fantasy, rec.arts.sf.written
    XPost: alt.books.marion-zimmer-bradley, alt.folklore

    This post by Steve Hayes to alt.mythology and some other
    groups may be of interest to the groups I have added.

    On Aug 12, 2023, Steve Hayes wrote
    (in article<56cedi5t1h0pp0r2p0uc0bsn3kk3trbskm@4ax.com>):

    In her introduction to this useful and insightful collection,
    co-editor Dimitra Fimi writes: “This edited volume aims to open a conversation about fantasy's multifaceted and enduring fascination
    with the Celtic past, and its various perceptions” (p. 4). Fimi notes
    that, while previous scholarship (including her own 2017 monograph)
    has focused on work written for children, the essays in this volume
    examine texts aimed at adult readers. The collection is divided into
    four sections: the first deals with what is loosely defined as
    “intrusion fantasy,” in which a Celtic “otherworld” overlaps with our own; section two looks at “worldbuilding” and the way authors use
    Celtic elements to create a fantasy world; section three has
    discussion of works in languages other than English; and the fourth
    and final section looks at how “the fantastic is situated within
    cultural practices perceived as Celtic” (p. 5).

    Read it all here:

    <http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/imagining-the-celtic-past-in-modern-fa
    ntasy-edited-by-dimitra-fimi-and-alistair-j-p-sims/>

    Read my thoughts on it here:

    <https://methodius.blogspot.com/2023/08/celtic-themes-in-fantasy-literature-an
    d.html>

    --
    https://www.nfld.com/~dalton/dtales.html Salmon on the Thorns (mystic page) "This could be the final breath; This is life and death;
    This is hard rock and water; Out here between wind and flame;
    Between tears and elation; Lies a secret nation" (Ron Hynes)

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