Description
It's early January at the cabin, before the snow. Cian watches the 1997 movie Fairy Tale: A True Story in the first of two investigations into the 1997 double-bill of Cottingley Fairy films. Grab yourself whatever you may need to get through a schmaltzy 90s kid film. Along the way we'll talk about:
-how Victorians & Edwardians were obsessed with fairies
-why Theosophists, Spiritualists, and Arthur Conan Doyle were so keen to believe in real fairies
-the strange friendship between Conan Doyle and the American magician Houdini
-the importance of ambiguity in films about fraud/belief
-the role of youth, femininity and class in the story of the Cottingley Fairies
SOURCES:
Borderland Forms: Arthur Conan Doyle, Albion's Daughters, and the Politics of the Cottingley Fairies, Alex Owen, History Workshop, 1994
https://academic.oup.com/hwj/article-abstract/38/1/48/643266?redirectedFrom=fulltext
The Coming Of The Fairies, Arthur Conan Doyle, 1922
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/47506/47506-h/47506-h.htm
Princess Mary's Gift Book
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/39592/39592-h/39592-h.htm
Cian chats with Michael Robinson, author of The Lost White Tribe. Topics include:
-the story of Henry Morton Stanley and his 'white' Ruwenzori tribe, a story that was famous at the time but is almost never mentioned today even in biographies of Stanley
-the birth of adventure fiction, the...
Published 03/27/24
A lost race in Panama and some man-eating trees show up in this Amazing Stories tale from 1926, written by traveller and finder of Lost Worlds in fact and fiction, A. Hyatt Verrill!
Buy Me A Coffee
Read the story here
Published 03/17/24