Seekers of Wonder

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A01=Elena Emma Sottilotta
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Author_Elena Emma Sottilotta
Category=DS
Category=DSM
Category=FNF
Category=JBSF1
Century
Che
Child
Collectors
Contexts
Contributions
Cultural
Culture
Da
Del
Deledda
Della
Di
Education
Emphasis
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnographic
Fairy
Family
Field
Figures
Folk
Folklore
Gender
Gonzenbach
Gregory
Gubernatis
History
Husband
Il
Informants
Insular
Island
Jane
Knowledge
La
Language
Le
Legends
Letter
Linguistic
Lore
Narratives
Nature
Oral
Peasants
Pitre
Piu
Power
Publication
Sardinia
Sardinian
Scholars
Sea
Section
Si
Sicilian
Stories
Storytellers
Studies
Tales
Traditional
Traditions
Una
Volume
Wife
Wilde
Writer
Writings
Yeats

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691263847
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Women’s cultural and political engagement with oral tales and traditions in European peripheries

With Seekers of Wonder, Elena Sottilotta offers the first comparative study of women’s manifold roles in the collection of Italian and Irish folklore and fairy tales between 1870 and 1920. Sottilotta views the often-overlooked work of these women from an interdisciplinary perspective, considering both the politics and poetics of seeking wonder. In so doing, she centers women’s influence on the preservation and dissemination of oral traditions, bringing work that was once relegated to the margins into dialogue with work long regarded as canonical.

After mapping sidelined, marginalized, and forgotten women folklorists, Sottilotta narrows the focus onto four writers and collectors who were inspired by Italian and Irish insular contexts: Laura Gonzenbach, who collected Sicilian wonder tales; Grazia Deledda, who wrote Sardinian ethnographic sketches, legends, and fairy tales; Jane Wilde, who published anthologies of Irish folklore; and Augusta Gregory, who collected traditional narratives in the west of Ireland. Situated within an ongoing process of rediscovery of lesser-known collectors, tellers, and tales in the European tradition, Sottilotta relocates these figures within a broader transcultural framework.

Throughout, Sottilotta emphasizes the role of women as crucial intermediaries between different cultural groups—in particular, between the world of the “folk” and the world of scholarly folklore studies. Unearthing rare archival material and reading these writings from the perspective of gender, Sottilotta sheds light on the identity dynamics that animated the cultural phenomenon of collecting folk and fairy tales in this era.

Elena Emma Sottilotta is research fellow at Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge. A Fulbright alumna, she specializes in women’s and gender studies, comparative literature, folklore, and fairy-tale studies.

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