Arachnomania

Regular price €25.99
A01=Maria M. Tatar
A01=Maria Tatar
Agatha christie
Anansi
Animal kingdom
Anxieties
Arachne
Arachnid
Arachnophobia
Aragog
Athena
Author_Maria M. Tatar
Author_Maria Tatar
Bertram mitford
Bourgeois
Category=JBC
Category=JBGB
Category=WNCN
Childhood
Cinematic
Creation myths
Cultural anxieties
Destructive
Domestic
Domestic arts
Domestic crafts
E b
Egg sac
Emily dickinson
Encounter
Environmental crisis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eva hesse
Evident
Evil
Fairy tales
Fatale
Femme
forthcoming
Funnel web
Gendered labor
Giant spider
Goddess
Gotthelf story
Harry
Harry potter
Hesse
Holmes
Horror
Iktomi
Kai hoog
Kinship
Lio sha
Loom
Louise
Louise bourgeois
Maman
Marvel cinematic
Minerva
Minerva punishing
Miss havisham
Miss muffet
Monster
Monstrous
Monstrous feminine
Monstrous spider
Muffet
Mysterious
Myth
Mythical
Natasha romanoff
Native cultures
Navajo
Nursery rhyme
Ovid
Ovid metamorphoses
Peter parker
Prey
Scott
Shelob
Silk
Soul
Spider
Spider silk
Spider web
Spinning weaving
Survival
Tales
Tapestry
Tarantula
Textiles
Tiny
Tolkien
Totem
Totem animal
Venom
Weave
Weaver
Widow
Wisdom
Woven

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691281025
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In praise of spiders in all their inspirational glory

Spiders are often found lurking in dusty corners, where we can observe them with interest or brush them away with disgust—or make a run for it, as the agitated Miss Muffet does. They are just as prevalent in our cultural landscapes, starring in horror films, inspiring works by famous artists and writers, and featured in myths and folktales. In Arachnomania, Maria Tatar explores how these creatures became our totem animals, our significant others, and our curved mirrors. Spiders model engineering genius in the construction of webs that have become powerful metaphors for drawing us out of our social isolation and connecting us in a fragile ecosystem. But these arachnids are also solitary in their habits and savage in their survival tactics. Spiders combine horror and beauty, and that may explain why we endow them with symbolic cultural weight.

Tatar invites us to acknowledge our collective arachnophobia yet also embrace arachnophilia and celebrate spiders for their cultural benefits and real-world merits. Spiders have been portrayed as the kindred spirits of femmes fatales and spinster sleuths. They have operated as proxies for our fear of nuclear annihilation but appear also in the form of benevolent gods and, in E. B. White’s Charlotte’s Web, as a heroic barnyard savior. Spiders, Tatar reminds us, enable us to sustain our way of life on earth even as they continue to scare the living daylights out of us. With Arachnomania, Tatar offers up an anthem to the humble creatures that haunt our imaginations, reminding us of just how much we are the kindred spirits of the arachnids we should think of as “some spiders.”

Maria Tatar is the John L. Loeb Research Professor of Folklore and Mythology and Germanic Languages and Literatures, Emerita, at Harvard University. Currently a Senior Fellow at Harvard’s Society of Fellows, she is the author of The Heroine with 1001 Faces, Secrets Beyond the Door: The Story of Bluebeard and His Wives (Princeton), The Hard Facts of the Grimms’ Fairy Tales (Princeton), and other books.