Parodies and retellings: Difference between revisions

From Feminist SF Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
** Peter Pan - "[[Lost Girls]]" by [[Pat Cadigan]] (1993)
** Peter Pan - "[[Lost Girls]]" by [[Pat Cadigan]] (1993)
** swans - Peg Kerr, "The Wild Swans" (1999)
** swans - Peg Kerr, "The Wild Swans" (1999)
** deerskin - Robin McKinley, ''Deerskin'' (1993)


Some non-SF examples:  
Some non-SF examples:  

Revision as of 21:19, 23 June 2006

Retelling stories is a common way for critics to make a critical point about a work. The commentary might be humorous, as in a humorous parody; critical, as in a work that demonstrates the earlier work's failings of writing or perspective; or exploratory, as in a work that explores new dimensions and resonances of an early story.

Examples are particularly common within science fiction and fantasy, but have also been common outside of sf.


Some non-SF examples:

  • Gone With the Wind ... Alice Randall's The Wind Done Gone
  • Lolita ... Lo's Diary
  • Jane Eyre ... The Wide Sargasso Sea


See Mythological Female Characters