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All Kinds of Fur short story  
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 All Kinds of Fur
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon South of the Sun : Australian Fairy Tales for the 21st Century South of the Sun: Australian Fairy Tales for the Twenty-First Century Australian Fairy Tale Society (editor), Waikiki : Serenity Press , 2021 22094283 2021 anthology single work short story poetry

    'This is an enchanting illustrated book of fairy tales – but not the kind you read to children at bedtime. They are strictly for the grown-ups. Often dark, the stories visit places where things don’t end happily ever after, where a single decision can haunt you forever. But there are also tales to make you laugh out loud, stories of sweet revenge and scenes of sheer delight in the world of magic and the fey.

    'All the stories, lyrics and poems have something in common, a contemporary edge. Even those set in earlier times have a modern sensibility that reflects the 21st century and celebrates Australian landscapes, characters and voices.' (Publisher's blurb)

    Waikiki : Serenity Press , 2021
    pg. 138-145

Works about this Work

Female Collaboration in Australian Fairy Tales Sarah Hart , Kristine Moruzi , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: Marvels & Tales , vol. 36 no. 1 2023; (p. 49-68)

'This article examines three fairy-tale texts that foreground women’s roles in Australia. We argue that although Kathleen Jennings’s Flyaway (2020) and Danielle Wood’s Mothers Grimm (2014) and her short story “All Kinds of Fur” (2021) are feminist insofar as they center women’s stories, they are limited by the extent to which they depict women working collaboratively. Although the fairy tale has the potential to disrupt patriarchal norms, these narratives offer constrained stories of women’s lives in which collaboration is possible but often fails to live up to its feminist potential to overturn conservative ideologies of femininity and power.' (Publication abstract)

Female Collaboration in Australian Fairy Tales Sarah Hart , Kristine Moruzi , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: Marvels & Tales , vol. 36 no. 1 2023; (p. 49-68)

'This article examines three fairy-tale texts that foreground women’s roles in Australia. We argue that although Kathleen Jennings’s Flyaway (2020) and Danielle Wood’s Mothers Grimm (2014) and her short story “All Kinds of Fur” (2021) are feminist insofar as they center women’s stories, they are limited by the extent to which they depict women working collaboratively. Although the fairy tale has the potential to disrupt patriarchal norms, these narratives offer constrained stories of women’s lives in which collaboration is possible but often fails to live up to its feminist potential to overturn conservative ideologies of femininity and power.' (Publication abstract)

Last amended 4 Aug 2021 14:39:05
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