Cinderella Rabbit
I chose the "Cinderella Rabbit" illustration because it reminded me of my favorite childhood story book: Angelina Ballerina. Angelina was a mouse, and this is clearly not a mouse... but the animals dressed in courtly clothes sparked something in my memory. I like this illustration because it clearly places magic back into the notion of the fairy tale. Joosen argues that many tales are being disenchanted because of society's stress on realism. In choosing to portray Cinderella and her Prince as enchanted rabbits, the illustrator makes the story very unreal, pulling magic to the forefront.
Even the landscape and the colors of the illustration portray a sense of magic. The "man in the moon" looks down on Cinderella and the Prince as they race from the ball. In looking at the other illustrations, not all of them evoke happiness or enchantment. My favorite aspect of fairy tales (at least contemporary-ish ones) is their happy endings. In a world of chaos and disappointment, fairy tales allow children (and apparently college students, such as myself) to escape into a magical world where anything is impossible and the characters always live "happily ever after."
Posted by Alex!
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