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History of fantasy

Elements of the supernatural and the fantastic were an element of literature from its beginning. The modern genre is distinguished from tales and folklore which contain fantastic elements, first by the acknowledged fictitious nature of the work, and second by the naming of an author.[citation needed] Works in which the marvels were not necessarily believed, or only half-believed, such as the European romances of chivalry and the tales of the Arabian Nights, slowly evolved into works with such traits.[original research?] Authors like George MacDonald (1824–1905) created the first explicitly fantastic works.

Illustration by Henry J. Ford for the fairy tale The Grateful Prince in The Violet Fairy Book (1901) edited by Andrew Lang

Later, in the twentieth century, the publication of The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien enormously influenced fantasy writing, establishing the form of epic fantasy. This also did much to establish the genre of fantasy as commercially distinct and viable. And today fantasy continues as an expansive, multi-layered milieu encompassing many subgenres, including traditional high fantasy, sword and sorcery, fairytale fantasy, and dark fantasy.

Differences between fantasy and earlier fantastic works edit

 
Illustration to Orlando furioso by Gustave Doré, featuring the hippogriff, a monster not found in folklore

Even the most fantastic myths, legends and fairy tales differ from modern fantasy genre in three respects:

Modern genre fantasy postulates a different reality, either a fantasy world separated from ours, or a hidden fantasy side of our own world. In addition, the rules, geography, history, etc. of this world tend to be defined, even if they are not described outright. Traditional fantastic tales take place in our world, often in the past or in far off, unknown places. It seldom describes the place or the time with any precision, often saying simply that it happened "long ago and far away." (A modern, rationalized analog to these stories can be found in the Lost World tales of the 19th and 20th centuries.)

The second difference is that the supernatural in fantasy is by design fictitious. In traditional tales the degree to which the author considered the supernatural to be real can span the spectrum from legends taken as reality to myths understood as describing in understandable terms more complicated reality, to late, intentionally-fictitious literary works.[1]

Finally, the fantastic worlds of modern fantasy are created by an author or group of authors, often using traditional elements, but usually in a novel arrangement and with an individual interpretation.[1] Traditional tales with fantasy elements used familiar myths and folklore, and any differences from tradition were considered variations on a theme; the traditional tales were never intended to be separate from the local supernatural folklore. Transitions between the traditional and modern modes of fantastic literature are evident in early Gothic novels, the ghost stories in vogue in the 19th century, and Romantic novels, all of which used extensively traditional fantastic motifs, but subjected them to authors' concepts.

By one standard, no work created before the fantasy genre was defined can be considered to belong to it, no matter how many fantastic elements it includes. By another, the genre includes the whole range of fantastic literature, both the modern genre and its traditional antecedents, as many elements which were treated as true (or at least not obviously untrue) by earlier authors are wholly fictitious and fantastic for modern readers. But even by the more limited definition a full examination of the history of the fantastic in literature is necessary to show the origins of the modern genre. Traditional works contain significant elements which modern fantasy authors have drawn upon extensively for inspiration in their own works.

Development of fantasy edit

Romances edit

 
The Damsel of the Sanct Grael, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti: medieval romance

With increases in learning in the medieval European era, literary fiction joined earlier myths and legends. Among the first genres to appear was romance. This genre embraced fantasy, and not only simply followed traditional myths and fables, but, in its final form, added new fantastical elements.[2] Romance at first dealt with traditional themes, above all three thematic cycles of tales, assembled in imagination at a late date as the Matter of Rome (focusing on military heroes like Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar), the Matter of France (Charlemagne and Roland, his principal paladin) and the Matter of Britain (the lives and deeds of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, within which was incorporated the quest for the Holy Grail), although a number of "non-cyclical" romances also achieved a great deal of popularity.[3]

The romances themselves were fictional, but such tales as Valentine and Orson, Guillaume de Palerme, and Queste del Saint Graal were only the beginning of the fantasy genre, combining realism and fantasy.

During the Renaissance, romance continued to be popular. The trend was to more fantastic fiction. The English Le Morte d'Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory (c. 1408–1471), was written in prose; this work dominates the Arthurian literature, often being regarded as the canonical form of the legend.[4] Arthurian motifs have appeared steadily in literature from its publication, though the works have been a mix of fantasy and non-fantasy works.[5] At the time, it and the Spanish Amadis de Gaula (1508), (also prose) spawned many imitators, and the genre was popularly well-received, producing such masterpiece of Renaissance poetry as Ludovico Ariosto's Orlando furioso and Torquato Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata. Ariosto's tale, with its endlessly wandering characters, many marvels, and adventures, was a source text for many fantasies of adventure.[6] With such works as Amadis of Gaul and Palmerin of England, the genre of fantasy was clearly inaugurated, as the marvels are deployed to amaze and surprise readers.[1]

 
Portrait of Isabella Saltonstall as Una, a character from The Faerie Queene, by George Stubbs.

One English romance is The Faerie Queene of Edmund Spenser.

The Enlightenment edit

 
Illustration by Gustave Doré to Perrault's Cinderella

Literary fairy tales, such as were written by Charles Perrault (1628 – 1703), and Madame d'Aulnoy (c.1650 – 1705), became very popular, early in the Age of Enlightenment. Many of Perrault's tales became fairy tale staples, and influenced latter fantasy as such. Indeed, when Madame d'Aulnoy termed her works contes de fée (fairy tales), she invented the term that is now generally used for the genre, thus distinguishing such tales from those involving no marvels.[7] This would influence later writers, who took up the folk fairy tales in the same manner, in the Romantic era.[8]

Several fantasies aimed at an adult readership were also published in 18th century France, including Voltaire's "contes philosophique" "The Princess of Babylon" (1768) and "The White Bull" (1774), and Jacques Cazotte's Faustian novel The Devil in Love.[9]

This era, however, was notably hostile to fantasy. Writers of the new types of fiction such as Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding were realistic in style, and many early realistic works were critical of fantastical elements in fiction.[10] Aside from a few tales of witchcraft and ghost stories, very little fantasy was written during this time.[8] Even children's literature saw little fantasy; it aimed at edifying and deplored fairy tales as lies.[11]

Romanticism edit

 
Lord Byron's Manfred

Romanticism highly prized the supernatural, tradition and imagination.[12]

Gothic tales permitted, but did not require, an element of the supernatural. Some stories appeared to contain such elements and then explained them away. The genre has been argued by some to straddle the border between fantasy and non-fantasy, but many elements from it, particularly the houses of particular import, being ancient, owned by nobles, and often endowed with legends, were incorporated in modern fantasy.[13]

Of particular importance to the development of the genre was that the Gothic writers used novelistic techniques and love, such as Defoe was using, rather than the literary style of the romance, and also began to use the landscape for purposes of expressing the characters' moods.[14]

On the other hand, the Gothic still held back the pure fantasy. In The Castle of Otranto, Walpole presented the work as a translation; the fictitious original author is therefore responsible for its fantasical elements, which Walpole distances himself from.[15] One noted Gothic novel which also contains a large amount of fantasy elements (derived from the "Arabian Nights") is Vathek by William Thomas Beckford.[16]

The Romantic interest in medievalism also resulted in a revival of interest in the literary fairy tale. The tradition begun with Giovanni Francesco Straparola and Giambattista Basile and developed by the Charles Perrault and the French précieuses, was taken up by the German Romantic movement. Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué created medieval-set stories such as Undine (1811)[17] and Sintram and his Companions (1815) which would later inspire British writers such as MacDonald and Morris.[18][19]E. T. A. Hoffmann's tales, such as "The Golden Pot" (1814) and "The Nutcracker and the Mouse King" (1816) were notable additions to the canon of German fantasy. [20] Ludwig Tieck's collection Phantasus (1812-1817) contained several short fairy tales, including "The Elves".[21]

In France, the main writers of Romantic-era fantasy were Charles Nodier, with Smarra (1821) and Trilby (1822) [22][23] and Théophile Gautier in stories such as "Omphale" (1834) and "One of Cleopatra's Nights" (1838), and the later novel Spirite (1866).[24][25]

In Britain, Sara Coleridge also wrote a fantasy novel, Phantasmion (1837), described as ""the first fairytale novel written in English".[26][27]

Modern fantasy edit

Pre-Tolkien edit

 
John Tenniel's illustration for "A Mad Tea-Party", 1865

In the early Victorian era, stories continued to be told using fantastic elements, less believed in. Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol, using novelistic characterization to make his ghost story plausible;[28] Scrooge at first doubts the reality of the ghosts, suspecting them his own imagination, an explanation that is never conclusively refuted.[28]

The fairy-tale tradition continued in the hands of such authors as William Makepeace Thackeray, but The Rose and the Ring showed many elements of parody.[29] Hans Christian Andersen, however, initiated a new style of fairy tales, original tales told in seriousness.[29] From this origin, John Ruskin wrote The King of the Golden River, a fairy tale that uses new levels of characterization, creating in the South-West Wind an irascible but kindly character similar to the later Gandalf.[29]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, modern fantasy began to take shape. The history of modern fantasy literature begins with George MacDonald, the Scottish author of such novels as The Princess and the Goblin and Phantastes; the latter can be considered to be the first fantasy novel written for adults.[30] MacDonald also wrote one of the first critical essays about the fantasy genre, "The Fantastic Imagination", in his book A Dish of Orts (1893).[31][32] MacDonald was a major influence on both J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis.[33]

 
The Funeral of a Viking by Frank Bernard Dicksee: The influence of Romanticism and traditional stories on Victorian fantasy meant it was an influence on fantasy as a genre.

Another major fantasy author of this era was William Morris, a socialist, an admirer of Middle Ages, a reviver of British handcrafts and a poet, who wrote several fantastic romances and novels in the latter part of the century, of which the most famous was The Well at the World's End. He was deeply inspired by the medieval romances and sagas; his style was deliberately archaic, based on medieval romances.[34] In many respects, Morris was an important milestone in the history of fantasy, because, while other writers wrote of foreign lands, or of dream worlds, Morris's works were the first to be set in an entirely invented world: a fantasy world.[35]

These fantasy worlds were part of a general trend. This era began a general trend toward more self-consistent and substantive fantasy worlds.[36] Earlier works often feature a solitary individual whose adventures in the fantasy world are of personal significance, and where the world clearly exists to give scope to these adventures, and later works more often feature characters in a social web, where their actions are to save the world and those in it from peril. In Phantastes, for instance, George MacDonald has a mentor-figure explain to the hero that the moral laws are the same in the world he is about to enter as in the world he came from; this lends weight and importance to his actions in this world, however fantastical it is.[37]

Authors such as Edgar Allan Poe and Oscar Wilde (in The Picture of Dorian Gray) also developed fantasy, in the telling of horror tales,[38] a separate branch of fantasy that was to have great influence on H. P. Lovecraft and other writers of dark fantasy.[original research?] Wilde also wrote a large number of children's fantasies, collected in The Happy Prince and Other Stories (1888) and A House of Pomegranates (1891).[39]

Despite MacDonald's future influence, and Morris' popularity at the time, it was not until around the start of the 20th century that fantasy fiction began to reach a large audience, with authors such as Lord Dunsany who, following Morris's example, wrote fantasy novels, but also in the short story form.[34] He was particularly noted for his vivid and evocative style.[34] His style greatly influenced many writers, not always happily; Ursula K. Le Guin, in her essay on style in fantasy "From Elfland to Poughkeepsie", wryly referred to Lord Dunsany as the "First Terrible Fate that Awaiteth Unwary Beginners in Fantasy", alluding to young writers attempting to write in Lord Dunsany's style.[40] S. T. Joshi claims that "Dunsany's work had the effect of segregating fantasy—a mode whereby the author creates his own realm of pure imagination—from supernatural horror. From the foundations he established came the later work of E. R. Eddison, Mervyn Peake, and J. R. R. Tolkien.[41]

According to historian Michael Saler, speculative fiction entered a new stage in the 1880s and 1890s as a consequence of the rise of the secular society, where the imagination in literature was freed from the influence of the church. This allowed writers to combine aesthetic literature with the freedom of the New Romance literature and the techniques used in literary realism.[42]

H. Rider Haggard developed the conventions of the Lost World subgenre, which sometime included fantasy works as in Haggard's own She.[43] With Africa still largely unknown to European writers, it offered scope to this type.[43] Other writers, including Edgar Rice Burroughs and Abraham Merritt, built on the convention.

 
Illustration from first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Several classic children's fantasies such as Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland,[44] J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan, L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, as well as the work of E. Nesbit and Frank R. Stockton were also published around this time.[45] Indeed, C. S. Lewis noted that in the earlier part of the 20th century, fantasy was more accepted in juvenile literature, and therefore a writer interested in fantasy often wrote in it to find an audience, despite concepts that could form an adult work.[46]

At this time, the terminology for the genre was not settled. Many fantasies were termed fairy tales, including Max Beerbohm's The Happy Hypocrite and MacDonald's Phantastes.[47] It was not until 1923 that the term "fantasist" was used to describe a writer (in this case, Oscar Wilde) who wrote fantasy fiction.[48] The name "fantasy" was not developed until later; as late as J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit, the term "fairy tale" was still being used.

An important factor in the development of the fantasy genre was the arrival of magazines devoted to fantasy fiction. The first such publication was the German magazine Der Orchideengarten which ran from 1919 to 1921.[49] In 1923, the first English-language fantasy fiction magazine, Weird Tales, was created.[50] Many other similar magazines eventually followed, most noticeably Unknown (AKA Unknown Worlds)[51] and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction [52] The pulp magazine format was at the height of its popularity at this time and was instrumental in bringing fantasy fiction to a wide audience in both the U.S. and Britain. Such magazines also played a large role in the rise of science fiction and it was at this time the two genres began to be associated with each other.

 
Weird Tales published works by such authors as Robert E Howard

Several of the genre's most prominent authors began their careers in these magazines including Clark Ashton Smith, Fritz Leiber, and Ray Bradbury. The early works of many sword and sorcery authors such as Robert E. Howard also began at this time.[53] By 1950, sword and sorcery had begun to find a wide audience, with the success of Howard's Conan the Barbarian, and Fritz Leiber's Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser stories. Howard's works, especially Conan, were to have a noteworthy, even defining, influence on the sword and sorcery subgenre.[54] They were tales of vivid, larger-than-life action and adventure,[55] and after the work of Tolkien, the most widely read works of fantasy.[56] Leiber's stories were particularly noted for their uncommon realism for the time; Unknown developed this trait, with many stories in it showing credibility and realism.[57] Like Morris and Eddison before him, Leiber continued the tradition of drawing on Northern European legend and folklore.[58] C. L. Moore was among Howard's first imitators, with "The Black God's Kiss", in which she introduced Jirel of Joiry and the heroine protagonist to sword and sorcery.[59] According to Gary Lachman, Helena Blavatsky had a significant influence on some of the biggest names in both fantasy and science fiction of the pulp era.[60]

Outside the pulp magazines, several American writers used the medium of fantasy for humorous and satirical purposes, including James Branch Cabell (whose 1919 novel Jurgen became the subject of an unsuccessful prosecution for obscenity),[61] Thorne Smith, with Topper (1926) and Turnabout (1931),[62] and Charles G. Finney, author of The Circus of Dr. Lao (1935).[63]

In Britain in the aftermath of World War I, a notably large number of fantasy books aimed at an adult readership were published, including Living Alone by Stella Benson,[64]A Voyage to Arcturus by David Lindsay,[65] Lady into Fox by David Garnett,[64] Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees,[64][66] and Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner.[64][67]E. R. Eddison, another influential writer, wrote during this era. He drew inspiration from Northern sagas, as Morris did, but his prose style was modeled more on Tudor and Elizabethan English, and his stories were filled with vigorous characters in glorious adventures.[35] Eddison's most famous work is The Worm Ouroboros, a long heroic fantasy set on an imaginary version of the planet Mercury. His characters were often of great ability and noble, if not royal, birth. These characters have been admired for his work in making his villains, particularly, more vivid characters than Tolkien's.[68] Others have observed that while it is popular to depict the great of the world trampling on the lower classes, his characters often treat their subjects with arrogance and insolence, and this is depicted as part of their greatness.[69] Indeed, at the end of The Worm Ouroboros, the heroes, finding peace dull, pray for and get the revival of their enemies, so that they may go and fight them again, regardless of the casualties that such a war would have.[70] Several of these writers (including Eddison, Lindsay, and Mirrlees) had their fantasy work republished during the 1960s and 1970s.[64]

In 1938, with the publication of The Sword in the Stone, T. H. White introduced one of the most notable works of comic fantasy.[71] This strain continued with such writers as L. Sprague de Camp.[72]

Literary critics of the era began to take an interest in "fantasy" as a genre of writing, and also to argue that it was a genre worthy of serious consideration. Herbert Read devoted a chapter of his book English Prose Style (1928) to discussing "Fantasy" as an aspect of literature, arguing it was unjustly considered suitable only for children: "The Western World does not seem to have conceived the necessity of Fairy Tales for Grown-Ups".[32] Edward Wagenknecht also discussed fantasy elements in both children's and adult fiction in his 1946 article "The Little Prince Rides the White Deer".[73]

Tolkien edit

It was the advent of high fantasy, in particular J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, which finally allowed fantasy to truly enter into the mainstream. Tolkien had published The Hobbit in 1937 and The Lord of the Rings in the 1950s; while the first was a fairy tale fantasy, the second was an epic fantasy that expanded upon the groundwork of the hobbit.[74][75] Although Tolkien's works had been successful in Britain, it was not until the late 1960s that they finally became popular in America thanks to its burgeoning counterculture.[76] In the early 60s there was a renewed interest in sword and sorcery, and publishers mined the pulps for older stories to reprint along with the limited amount of new material. In demand for more, Ace Books science fiction editor Donald A. Wollheim felt Tolkien's three part novel had enough elements in common with sword and sorcery that it would appeal to the readers of the latter, after which he published an unauthorized paperback edition. On its first-page blurb, it was described as "a book of sword-and-sorcery that anyone can read with delight and pleasure". But the readers of the book would extend way beyond sword and sorcery fandom.[77] By the end of 1968, The Lord of the Rings had sold over 3 million copies in America. Its unexpected success caused American publishers to swiftly reissue a large number of older, often obscure, fantasy novels, catapulting them to belated success.[78]

It is difficult to overstate the impact that The Lord of the Rings had on the fantasy genre; in some respects, it swamped all the works of fantasy that had been written before it, and it unquestionably created "fantasy" as a marketing category.[79] It created an enormous number of Tolkienesque works, using the themes found in The Lord of the Rings.[79]

Tolkien's works also helped fantasy literature to achieve a new degree of mainstream critical acclaim. Numerous polls to identify the greatest book of the century found The Lord of the Rings selected by widely different groups.[76]

While constructing original fantasy worlds with detailed histories, geographies and political landscapes had been a part of the genre from the time of L. Frank Baum, Tolkien's influence greatly popularized the notion. This led to a subsequent decline of such devices as dream frames to explain away the fantastical nature of the setting. This stemmed not only from his example, but from his literary criticism; his "On Fairy Stories", in which he termed such settings "secondary worlds," was a formative work of fantasy criticism.[80]

The impact that his books, combined with the success of several other series such as C. S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast series[81] and Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea, helped cement the genre's popularity and gave birth to the current wave of fantasy literature.

Post-Tolkien edit

With the immense success of Tolkien's works, publishers began to search for a new series with similar mass-market appeal. Fantasy novels began to replace fiction magazines as the heart of the genre.

Lin Carter edited the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series, when Ballantine pursued the fantasy market; it was so titled to avert the series being filed as children's literature. The line contained mostly reprints, but introduced some new fantasy works. Reprinted authors included William Morris, Lord Dunsany, and George MacDonald; more recent authors included Hope Mirrlees's Lud-in-the-Mist, Ernest Bramah's Kai Lung books, and Evangeline Walton's The Island of the Mighty, the success of which led to the publication of the other three novels she had written in that series, and to a distinct strain of Celtic fantasy in later fantasy.[82] Another work in this series that was influential for the Celtic fantasy subgenre was Katherine Kurtz's Deryni Rising.

Although many fantasy novels of this time proved popular, it was not until 1977's The Sword of Shannara that publishers found the sort of breakthrough success they had hoped for. The book became the first fantasy novel to appear on, and eventually top the New York Times bestseller list. As a result, the genre saw a boom in the number of titles published. Fantasy novels of the late 1970s and 1980s included Stephen R. Donaldson's Lord Foul's Bane (1977) the first in The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever series, John Crowley's Little, Big (1981), Raymond E. Feist's Magician (1982), Robert Holdstock's Mythago Wood (1984) and Glen Cook's Black Company series.[83]

By the early 1980s the fantasy market was much larger than that of almost all science fiction authors.[84] The long-running series of light fantasies by Piers Anthony (Xanth) and Terry Pratchett (Discworld) regularly hit the bestseller lists from the 1980s onward. Notable books of the 1990s include Robert Jordan's popular series The Wheel of Time, Tad Williams' Memory, Sorrow and Thorn series and George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire (the basis of the American fantasy drama television series Game of Thrones).[85] A Song of Ice and Fire is considered a path-breaking work which paved the way for a new kind of fantasy referred to as grimdark, which was less idealistic and more violent in nature.[86][87] With J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter novels, which have become the best selling book series of all time, fantasy is becoming increasingly intertwined with mainstream fiction; a process aided by the international popularity of other works such as Christopher Paolini's Inheritance Cycle, Ranger's Apprentice by John Flanagan, Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Archive, and Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. The success of major film adaptations such as The Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, and The Chronicles of Narnia film series has helped further this trend.

Since the 1990s, the genre has been marked by the rise of female-centric urban fantasy, very different from Tolkien's works, as shown by the popularity of Laurell K. Hamilton's Anita Blake novels and Charlaine Harris' The Southern Vampire Mysteries books.[88]

References edit

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  42. ^ “From Imaginary to Virtual Worlds”: An Interview with Historian Michael Saler (Part One)
  43. ^ a b Lin Carter, ed. Realms of Wizardry p 64 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  44. ^ J.R. Pfeiffer, "Lewis Carroll", p 247-54, in E. F. Bleiler, Supernatural Fiction Writers: Fantasy and Horror. Scribner's, New York, 1985 ISBN 0-684-17808-7
  45. ^ Brian Stableford, The A to Z of Fantasy Literature, p 70-3, Scarecrow Press, Plymouth. 2005. ISBN 0-8108-6829-6
  46. ^ C. S. Lewis, "On Juvenile Tastes", p 41, Of Other Worlds: Essays and Stories, ISBN 0-15-667897-7
  47. ^ W.R. Irwin, The Game of the Impossible, p 92-3, University of Illinois Press, Urbana Chicago London, 1976
  48. ^ The term was referenced in a supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary. See Michael W. McClintock, "High Tech and High Sorcery: Some Discriminations Between Science Fiction and Fantasy", in George E. Slusser, and Eric S. Rabkin, ed., Intersections: Fantasy and Science Fiction. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1987.ISBN 080931374X (pp.26-35.).
  49. ^ "Orchideengarten, Der". in: M.B. Tymn and Mike Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines. Westport: Greenwood, 1985. pp. 866. ISBN 0-313-21221-X
  50. ^ Robert Weinberg, The Weird Tales Story Wildside Press,1999. ISBN 1-58715-101-4
  51. ^ "Unknown". in: M.B. Tymn and Mike Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines. Westport: Greenwood, 1985. pp.694-698. ISBN 0-313-21221-X
  52. ^ Thomas D. Clareson, "Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction" in M.B. Tymn and Mike Ashley, Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines. Westport: Greenwood, 1985. (pp.377-391). ISBN 0-313-21221-X
  53. ^ Charles Hoffman, "Robert E. Howard: Twentieth Century Mythmaker", in The Best of Robert E. Howard, Vol. 1, Crimson Shadows. Del Rey, 2007 pp. 473-84, ISBN 0-345-49018-5.
  54. ^ Diana Waggoner, The Hills of Faraway: A Guide to Fantasy, p 47-8, 0-689-10846-X
  55. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Realms of Wizardry p 146 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  56. ^ L. Sprague de Camp, Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers: The Makers of Heroic Fantasy, p 135 ISBN 0-87054-076-9
  57. ^ Michael Moorcock, Wizardry & Wild Romance: A Study of Epic Fantasy p 50 ISBN 1-932265-07-4
  58. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Kingdoms of Sorcery, p 85 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  59. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Realms of Wizardry p 205 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  60. ^ Handbook of New Religions and Cultural Production
  61. ^ Brian Stableford, The A to Z of Fantasy Literature, p 58-9, Scarecrow Press, Plymouth. 2005. ISBN 0-8108-6829-6
  62. ^ Keith Neilson, "Thorne Smith" (pp. 805-812). in Bleiler, ed.Supernatural Fiction Writers. New York: Scribner's, 1985. ISBN 0-684-17808-7
  63. ^ Gary K. Wolfe, "The Circus of Dr. Lao", p 282-6, in Frank N. Magill, ed. Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature, Vol 1. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, Inc., 1983. ISBN 0-89356-450-8.
  64. ^ a b c d e Brian Stableford, " Re-Enchantment in the Aftermath of War", in Stableford, Gothic Grotesques: Essays on Fantastic Literature. Wildside Press, 2009, ISBN 978-1-4344-0339-1
  65. ^ "David Lindsay" by Gary K. Wolfe, (pp.541–548) in E. F. Bleiler, ed. Supernatural Fiction Writers. New York: Scribner's, 1985. ISBN 0-684-17808-7
  66. ^ E.L. Chapman, "Lud-in-the-Mist", in Frank N. Magill, ed. Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature, Vol. 2. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, Inc., 1983. ISBN 0-89356-450-8. pp. 926-931.
  67. ^ Robin Anne Reid, Women in Science Fiction and Fantasy (p.39), ABC-CLIO, 2009 ISBN 0313335915.
  68. ^ Michael Moorcock, Wizardry & Wild Romance: A Study of Epic Fantasy p 47 ISBN 1-932265-07-4
  69. ^ L. Sprague de Camp, Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers: The Makers of Heroic Fantasy, p 132-3 ISBN 0-87054-076-9
  70. ^ L. Sprague de Camp, Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers: The Makers of Heroic Fantasy, p 116 ISBN 0-87054-076-9
  71. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Kingdoms of Sorcery, p 121-2 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  72. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Kingdoms of Sorcery, p 136 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  73. ^ Edward Wagenknecht, "The Little Prince Rides the White Deer: Fantasy and Symbolism in Recent Literature", College English 7(8): 431-437. May 1946.
  74. ^ Lin Carter, ed. Kingdoms of Sorcery, p 196 Doubleday and Company Garden City, NY, 1976
  75. ^ Edward James,"Tolkien, J(ohn) R(onald), R(euel)", St. James Guide To Fantasy Writers, ed. David Pringle, St. James Press, 1996, ISBN 1-55862-205-5, pp 558-61.
  76. ^ a b Tom Shippey, J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century pp xx-xxi, ISBN 0-618-25759-4
  77. ^ The Book of Swords
  78. ^ Scroggins, Mark (2016). Michael Moorcock: Fiction, Fantasy, and the World's Pain. Jefferson, NC: MacFarland & Co. ISBN 978-1-4766-2417-4.
  79. ^ a b Jane Yolen, "Introduction" p vii-viii in After the King: Stories in Honor of J.R.R. Tolkien, ed., Martin H. Greenberg, ISBN 0-312-85175-8
  80. ^ John Grant and John Clute, The Encyclopedia of Fantasy, "Tolkien, J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel)", p 951 ISBN 0-312-19869-8
  81. ^ Robert Irwin,,"Peake, Mervyn (Laurence)", St. James Guide To Fantasy Writers, ed. David Pringle, St. James Press, 1996, ISBN 1-55862-205-5, pp. 469-70
  82. ^ John Grant and John Clute, The Encyclopedia of Fantasy, "Ballantine Adult Fantasy series" p 82, ISBN 0-312-19869-8
  83. ^ Mathews, Richard (2002). Fantasy: The Liberation of Imagination. Routledge. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-415-93890-7.
  84. ^ "Locus Online: Betsy Wollheim interview excerpts". Locus. June 2006. Retrieved 2017-12-06.
  85. ^ Mendlesohn, Farah; James, Edward (2012) [2009]. "Chapter 9: The 1990s". A Short History of Fantasy (2nd ed.). Faringdon, Oxfordshire: Libri Publishing. pp. 143–166. ISBN 978-1-907471-66-7.
  86. ^ Roberts, Adam (2014). Get Started in: Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy. Hachette UK. p. 42. ISBN 978-1444795660.
  87. ^ Walter, Damien (1 January 2016). "Science fiction and fantasy look ahead to a diverse 2016". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  88. ^ The Secret History of Fantasy, edited by Peter S. Beagle (Reviewed by Chris Kammerud) 2011-05-25 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading edit

  • Attebery, Brian (1980). The Fantasy Tradition in American Literature: From Irving to Le Guin. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253356659.

history, fantasy, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, addin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Elements of the supernatural and the fantastic were an element of literature from its beginning The modern genre is distinguished from tales and folklore which contain fantastic elements first by the acknowledged fictitious nature of the work and second by the naming of an author citation needed Works in which the marvels were not necessarily believed or only half believed such as the European romances of chivalry and the tales of the Arabian Nights slowly evolved into works with such traits original research Authors like George MacDonald 1824 1905 created the first explicitly fantastic works Illustration by Henry J Ford for the fairy tale The Grateful Prince in The Violet Fairy Book 1901 edited by Andrew LangLater in the twentieth century the publication of The Lord of the Rings by J R R Tolkien enormously influenced fantasy writing establishing the form of epic fantasy This also did much to establish the genre of fantasy as commercially distinct and viable And today fantasy continues as an expansive multi layered milieu encompassing many subgenres including traditional high fantasy sword and sorcery fairytale fantasy and dark fantasy Contents 1 Differences between fantasy and earlier fantastic works 2 Development of fantasy 2 1 Romances 2 2 The Enlightenment 2 3 Romanticism 3 Modern fantasy 3 1 Pre Tolkien 3 2 Tolkien 3 3 Post Tolkien 4 References 4 1 Further readingDifferences between fantasy and earlier fantastic works editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Illustration to Orlando furioso by Gustave Dore featuring the hippogriff a monster not found in folkloreEven the most fantastic myths legends and fairy tales differ from modern fantasy genre in three respects Modern genre fantasy postulates a different reality either a fantasy world separated from ours or a hidden fantasy side of our own world In addition the rules geography history etc of this world tend to be defined even if they are not described outright Traditional fantastic tales take place in our world often in the past or in far off unknown places It seldom describes the place or the time with any precision often saying simply that it happened long ago and far away A modern rationalized analog to these stories can be found in the Lost World tales of the 19th and 20th centuries The second difference is that the supernatural in fantasy is by design fictitious In traditional tales the degree to which the author considered the supernatural to be real can span the spectrum from legends taken as reality to myths understood as describing in understandable terms more complicated reality to late intentionally fictitious literary works 1 Finally the fantastic worlds of modern fantasy are created by an author or group of authors often using traditional elements but usually in a novel arrangement and with an individual interpretation 1 Traditional tales with fantasy elements used familiar myths and folklore and any differences from tradition were considered variations on a theme the traditional tales were never intended to be separate from the local supernatural folklore Transitions between the traditional and modern modes of fantastic literature are evident in early Gothic novels the ghost stories in vogue in the 19th century and Romantic novels all of which used extensively traditional fantastic motifs but subjected them to authors concepts By one standard no work created before the fantasy genre was defined can be considered to belong to it no matter how many fantastic elements it includes By another the genre includes the whole range of fantastic literature both the modern genre and its traditional antecedents as many elements which were treated as true or at least not obviously untrue by earlier authors are wholly fictitious and fantastic for modern readers But even by the more limited definition a full examination of the history of the fantastic in literature is necessary to show the origins of the modern genre Traditional works contain significant elements which modern fantasy authors have drawn upon extensively for inspiration in their own works Development of fantasy editRomances edit nbsp The Damsel of the Sanct Grael by Dante Gabriel Rossetti medieval romanceWith increases in learning in the medieval European era literary fiction joined earlier myths and legends Among the first genres to appear was romance This genre embraced fantasy and not only simply followed traditional myths and fables but in its final form added new fantastical elements 2 Romance at first dealt with traditional themes above all three thematic cycles of tales assembled in imagination at a late date as the Matter of Rome focusing on military heroes like Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar the Matter of France Charlemagne and Roland his principal paladin and the Matter of Britain the lives and deeds of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table within which was incorporated the quest for the Holy Grail although a number of non cyclical romances also achieved a great deal of popularity 3 The romances themselves were fictional but such tales as Valentine and Orson Guillaume de Palerme and Queste del Saint Graal were only the beginning of the fantasy genre combining realism and fantasy During the Renaissance romance continued to be popular The trend was to more fantastic fiction The English Le Morte d Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory c 1408 1471 was written in prose this work dominates the Arthurian literature often being regarded as the canonical form of the legend 4 Arthurian motifs have appeared steadily in literature from its publication though the works have been a mix of fantasy and non fantasy works 5 At the time it and the Spanish Amadis de Gaula 1508 also prose spawned many imitators and the genre was popularly well received producing such masterpiece of Renaissance poetry as Ludovico Ariosto s Orlando furioso and Torquato Tasso s Gerusalemme Liberata Ariosto s tale with its endlessly wandering characters many marvels and adventures was a source text for many fantasies of adventure 6 With such works as Amadis of Gaul and Palmerin of England the genre of fantasy was clearly inaugurated as the marvels are deployed to amaze and surprise readers 1 nbsp Portrait of Isabella Saltonstall as Una a character from The Faerie Queene by George Stubbs One English romance is The Faerie Queene of Edmund Spenser The Enlightenment edit nbsp Illustration by Gustave Dore to Perrault s CinderellaLiterary fairy tales such as were written by Charles Perrault 1628 1703 and Madame d Aulnoy c 1650 1705 became very popular early in the Age of Enlightenment Many of Perrault s tales became fairy tale staples and influenced latter fantasy as such Indeed when Madame d Aulnoy termed her works contes de fee fairy tales she invented the term that is now generally used for the genre thus distinguishing such tales from those involving no marvels 7 This would influence later writers who took up the folk fairy tales in the same manner in the Romantic era 8 Several fantasies aimed at an adult readership were also published in 18th century France including Voltaire s contes philosophique The Princess of Babylon 1768 and The White Bull 1774 and Jacques Cazotte s Faustian novel The Devil in Love 9 This era however was notably hostile to fantasy Writers of the new types of fiction such as Defoe Richardson and Fielding were realistic in style and many early realistic works were critical of fantastical elements in fiction 10 Aside from a few tales of witchcraft and ghost stories very little fantasy was written during this time 8 Even children s literature saw little fantasy it aimed at edifying and deplored fairy tales as lies 11 Romanticism edit nbsp Lord Byron s ManfredRomanticism highly prized the supernatural tradition and imagination 12 Gothic tales permitted but did not require an element of the supernatural Some stories appeared to contain such elements and then explained them away The genre has been argued by some to straddle the border between fantasy and non fantasy but many elements from it particularly the houses of particular import being ancient owned by nobles and often endowed with legends were incorporated in modern fantasy 13 Of particular importance to the development of the genre was that the Gothic writers used novelistic techniques and love such as Defoe was using rather than the literary style of the romance and also began to use the landscape for purposes of expressing the characters moods 14 On the other hand the Gothic still held back the pure fantasy In The Castle of Otranto Walpole presented the work as a translation the fictitious original author is therefore responsible for its fantasical elements which Walpole distances himself from 15 One noted Gothic novel which also contains a large amount of fantasy elements derived from the Arabian Nights is Vathek by William Thomas Beckford 16 The Romantic interest in medievalism also resulted in a revival of interest in the literary fairy tale The tradition begun with Giovanni Francesco Straparola and Giambattista Basile and developed by the Charles Perrault and the French precieuses was taken up by the German Romantic movement Friedrich de la Motte Fouque created medieval set stories such as Undine 1811 17 and Sintram and his Companions 1815 which would later inspire British writers such as MacDonald and Morris 18 19 E T A Hoffmann s tales such as The Golden Pot 1814 and The Nutcracker and the Mouse King 1816 were notable additions to the canon of German fantasy 20 Ludwig Tieck s collection Phantasus 1812 1817 contained several short fairy tales including The Elves 21 In France the main writers of Romantic era fantasy were Charles Nodier with Smarra 1821 and Trilby 1822 22 23 and Theophile Gautier in stories such as Omphale 1834 and One of Cleopatra s Nights 1838 and the later novel Spirite 1866 24 25 In Britain Sara Coleridge also wrote a fantasy novel Phantasmion 1837 described as the first fairytale novel written in English 26 27 Modern fantasy editPre Tolkien edit nbsp John Tenniel s illustration for A Mad Tea Party 1865In the early Victorian era stories continued to be told using fantastic elements less believed in Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol using novelistic characterization to make his ghost story plausible 28 Scrooge at first doubts the reality of the ghosts suspecting them his own imagination an explanation that is never conclusively refuted 28 The fairy tale tradition continued in the hands of such authors as William Makepeace Thackeray but The Rose and the Ring showed many elements of parody 29 Hans Christian Andersen however initiated a new style of fairy tales original tales told in seriousness 29 From this origin John Ruskin wrote The King of the Golden River a fairy tale that uses new levels of characterization creating in the South West Wind an irascible but kindly character similar to the later Gandalf 29 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries modern fantasy began to take shape The history of modern fantasy literature begins with George MacDonald the Scottish author of such novels as The Princess and the Goblin and Phantastes the latter can be considered to be the first fantasy novel written for adults 30 MacDonald also wrote one of the first critical essays about the fantasy genre The Fantastic Imagination in his book A Dish of Orts 1893 31 32 MacDonald was a major influence on both J R R Tolkien and C S Lewis 33 nbsp The Funeral of a Viking by Frank Bernard Dicksee The influence of Romanticism and traditional stories on Victorian fantasy meant it was an influence on fantasy as a genre Another major fantasy author of this era was William Morris a socialist an admirer of Middle Ages a reviver of British handcrafts and a poet who wrote several fantastic romances and novels in the latter part of the century of which the most famous was The Well at the World s End He was deeply inspired by the medieval romances and sagas his style was deliberately archaic based on medieval romances 34 In many respects Morris was an important milestone in the history of fantasy because while other writers wrote of foreign lands or of dream worlds Morris s works were the first to be set in an entirely invented world a fantasy world 35 These fantasy worlds were part of a general trend This era began a general trend toward more self consistent and substantive fantasy worlds 36 Earlier works often feature a solitary individual whose adventures in the fantasy world are of personal significance and where the world clearly exists to give scope to these adventures and later works more often feature characters in a social web where their actions are to save the world and those in it from peril In Phantastes for instance George MacDonald has a mentor figure explain to the hero that the moral laws are the same in the world he is about to enter as in the world he came from this lends weight and importance to his actions in this world however fantastical it is 37 Authors such as Edgar Allan Poe and Oscar Wilde in The Picture of Dorian Gray also developed fantasy in the telling of horror tales 38 a separate branch of fantasy that was to have great influence on H P Lovecraft and other writers of dark fantasy original research Wilde also wrote a large number of children s fantasies collected in The Happy Prince and Other Stories 1888 and A House of Pomegranates 1891 39 Despite MacDonald s future influence and Morris popularity at the time it was not until around the start of the 20th century that fantasy fiction began to reach a large audience with authors such as Lord Dunsany who following Morris s example wrote fantasy novels but also in the short story form 34 He was particularly noted for his vivid and evocative style 34 His style greatly influenced many writers not always happily Ursula K Le Guin in her essay on style in fantasy From Elfland to Poughkeepsie wryly referred to Lord Dunsany as the First Terrible Fate that Awaiteth Unwary Beginners in Fantasy alluding to young writers attempting to write in Lord Dunsany s style 40 S T Joshi claims that Dunsany s work had the effect of segregating fantasy a mode whereby the author creates his own realm of pure imagination from supernatural horror From the foundations he established came the later work of E R Eddison Mervyn Peake and J R R Tolkien 41 According to historian Michael Saler speculative fiction entered a new stage in the 1880s and 1890s as a consequence of the rise of the secular society where the imagination in literature was freed from the influence of the church This allowed writers to combine aesthetic literature with the freedom of the New Romance literature and the techniques used in literary realism 42 H Rider Haggard developed the conventions of the Lost World subgenre which sometime included fantasy works as in Haggard s own She 43 With Africa still largely unknown to European writers it offered scope to this type 43 Other writers including Edgar Rice Burroughs and Abraham Merritt built on the convention nbsp Illustration from first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of OzSeveral classic children s fantasies such as Lewis Carroll s Alice in Wonderland 44 J M Barrie s Peter Pan L Frank Baum s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz as well as the work of E Nesbit and Frank R Stockton were also published around this time 45 Indeed C S Lewis noted that in the earlier part of the 20th century fantasy was more accepted in juvenile literature and therefore a writer interested in fantasy often wrote in it to find an audience despite concepts that could form an adult work 46 At this time the terminology for the genre was not settled Many fantasies were termed fairy tales including Max Beerbohm s The Happy Hypocrite and MacDonald s Phantastes 47 It was not until 1923 that the term fantasist was used to describe a writer in this case Oscar Wilde who wrote fantasy fiction 48 The name fantasy was not developed until later as late as J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit the term fairy tale was still being used An important factor in the development of the fantasy genre was the arrival of magazines devoted to fantasy fiction The first such publication was the German magazine Der Orchideengarten which ran from 1919 to 1921 49 In 1923 the first English language fantasy fiction magazine Weird Tales was created 50 Many other similar magazines eventually followed most noticeably Unknown AKA Unknown Worlds 51 and The Magazine of Fantasy amp Science Fiction 52 The pulp magazine format was at the height of its popularity at this time and was instrumental in bringing fantasy fiction to a wide audience in both the U S and Britain Such magazines also played a large role in the rise of science fiction and it was at this time the two genres began to be associated with each other nbsp Weird Tales published works by such authors as Robert E HowardSeveral of the genre s most prominent authors began their careers in these magazines including Clark Ashton Smith Fritz Leiber and Ray Bradbury The early works of many sword and sorcery authors such as Robert E Howard also began at this time 53 By 1950 sword and sorcery had begun to find a wide audience with the success of Howard s Conan the Barbarian and Fritz Leiber s Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser stories Howard s works especially Conan were to have a noteworthy even defining influence on the sword and sorcery subgenre 54 They were tales of vivid larger than life action and adventure 55 and after the work of Tolkien the most widely read works of fantasy 56 Leiber s stories were particularly noted for their uncommon realism for the time Unknown developed this trait with many stories in it showing credibility and realism 57 Like Morris and Eddison before him Leiber continued the tradition of drawing on Northern European legend and folklore 58 C L Moore was among Howard s first imitators with The Black God s Kiss in which she introduced Jirel of Joiry and the heroine protagonist to sword and sorcery 59 According to Gary Lachman Helena Blavatsky had a significant influence on some of the biggest names in both fantasy and science fiction of the pulp era 60 Outside the pulp magazines several American writers used the medium of fantasy for humorous and satirical purposes including James Branch Cabell whose 1919 novel Jurgen became the subject of an unsuccessful prosecution for obscenity 61 Thorne Smith with Topper 1926 and Turnabout 1931 62 and Charles G Finney author of The Circus of Dr Lao 1935 63 In Britain in the aftermath of World War I a notably large number of fantasy books aimed at an adult readership were published including Living Alone by Stella Benson 64 A Voyage to Arcturus by David Lindsay 65 Lady into Fox by David Garnett 64 Lud in the Mist by Hope Mirrlees 64 66 and Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner 64 67 E R Eddison another influential writer wrote during this era He drew inspiration from Northern sagas as Morris did but his prose style was modeled more on Tudor and Elizabethan English and his stories were filled with vigorous characters in glorious adventures 35 Eddison s most famous work is The Worm Ouroboros a long heroic fantasy set on an imaginary version of the planet Mercury His characters were often of great ability and noble if not royal birth These characters have been admired for his work in making his villains particularly more vivid characters than Tolkien s 68 Others have observed that while it is popular to depict the great of the world trampling on the lower classes his characters often treat their subjects with arrogance and insolence and this is depicted as part of their greatness 69 Indeed at the end of The Worm Ouroboros the heroes finding peace dull pray for and get the revival of their enemies so that they may go and fight them again regardless of the casualties that such a war would have 70 Several of these writers including Eddison Lindsay and Mirrlees had their fantasy work republished during the 1960s and 1970s 64 In 1938 with the publication of The Sword in the Stone T H White introduced one of the most notable works of comic fantasy 71 This strain continued with such writers as L Sprague de Camp 72 Literary critics of the era began to take an interest in fantasy as a genre of writing and also to argue that it was a genre worthy of serious consideration Herbert Read devoted a chapter of his book English Prose Style 1928 to discussing Fantasy as an aspect of literature arguing it was unjustly considered suitable only for children The Western World does not seem to have conceived the necessity of Fairy Tales for Grown Ups 32 Edward Wagenknecht also discussed fantasy elements in both children s and adult fiction in his 1946 article The Little Prince Rides the White Deer 73 Tolkien edit It was the advent of high fantasy in particular J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings which finally allowed fantasy to truly enter into the mainstream Tolkien had published The Hobbit in 1937 and The Lord of the Rings in the 1950s while the first was a fairy tale fantasy the second was an epic fantasy that expanded upon the groundwork of the hobbit 74 75 Although Tolkien s works had been successful in Britain it was not until the late 1960s that they finally became popular in America thanks to its burgeoning counterculture 76 In the early 60s there was a renewed interest in sword and sorcery and publishers mined the pulps for older stories to reprint along with the limited amount of new material In demand for more Ace Books science fiction editor Donald A Wollheim felt Tolkien s three part novel had enough elements in common with sword and sorcery that it would appeal to the readers of the latter after which he published an unauthorized paperback edition On its first page blurb it was described as a book of sword and sorcery that anyone can read with delight and pleasure But the readers of the book would extend way beyond sword and sorcery fandom 77 By the end of 1968 The Lord of the Rings had sold over 3 million copies in America Its unexpected success caused American publishers to swiftly reissue a large number of older often obscure fantasy novels catapulting them to belated success 78 It is difficult to overstate the impact that The Lord of the Rings had on the fantasy genre in some respects it swamped all the works of fantasy that had been written before it and it unquestionably created fantasy as a marketing category 79 It created an enormous number of Tolkienesque works using the themes found in The Lord of the Rings 79 Tolkien s works also helped fantasy literature to achieve a new degree of mainstream critical acclaim Numerous polls to identify the greatest book of the century found The Lord of the Rings selected by widely different groups 76 While constructing original fantasy worlds with detailed histories geographies and political landscapes had been a part of the genre from the time of L Frank Baum Tolkien s influence greatly popularized the notion This led to a subsequent decline of such devices as dream frames to explain away the fantastical nature of the setting This stemmed not only from his example but from his literary criticism his On Fairy Stories in which he termed such settings secondary worlds was a formative work of fantasy criticism 80 The impact that his books combined with the success of several other series such as C S Lewis s Chronicles of Narnia Mervyn Peake s Gormenghast series 81 and Ursula K Le Guin s Earthsea helped cement the genre s popularity and gave birth to the current wave of fantasy literature Post Tolkien edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of fantasy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message With the immense success of Tolkien s works publishers began to search for a new series with similar mass market appeal Fantasy novels began to replace fiction magazines as the heart of the genre Lin Carter edited the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series when Ballantine pursued the fantasy market it was so titled to avert the series being filed as children s literature The line contained mostly reprints but introduced some new fantasy works Reprinted authors included William Morris Lord Dunsany and George MacDonald more recent authors included Hope Mirrlees s Lud in the Mist Ernest Bramah s Kai Lung books and Evangeline Walton s The Island of the Mighty the success of which led to the publication of the other three novels she had written in that series and to a distinct strain of Celtic fantasy in later fantasy 82 Another work in this series that was influential for the Celtic fantasy subgenre was Katherine Kurtz s Deryni Rising Although many fantasy novels of this time proved popular it was not until 1977 s The Sword of Shannara that publishers found the sort of breakthrough success they had hoped for The book became the first fantasy novel to appear on and eventually top the New York Times bestseller list As a result the genre saw a boom in the number of titles published Fantasy novels of the late 1970s and 1980s included Stephen R Donaldson s Lord Foul s Bane 1977 the first in The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever series John Crowley s Little Big 1981 Raymond E Feist s Magician 1982 Robert Holdstock s Mythago Wood 1984 and Glen Cook s Black Company series 83 By the early 1980s the fantasy market was much larger than that of almost all science fiction authors 84 The long running series of light fantasies by Piers Anthony Xanth and Terry Pratchett Discworld regularly hit the bestseller lists from the 1980s onward Notable books of the 1990s include Robert Jordan s popular series The Wheel of Time Tad Williams Memory Sorrow and Thorn series and George R R Martin s A Song of Ice and Fire the basis of the American fantasy drama television series Game of Thrones 85 A Song of Ice and Fire is considered a path breaking work which paved the way for a new kind of fantasy referred to as grimdark which was less idealistic and more violent in nature 86 87 With J K Rowling s Harry Potter novels which have become the best selling book series of all time fantasy is becoming increasingly intertwined with mainstream fiction a process aided by the international popularity of other works such as Christopher Paolini s Inheritance Cycle Ranger s Apprentice by John Flanagan Brandon Sanderson s Stormlight Archive and Philip Pullman s His Dark Materials The success of major film adaptations such as The Lord of the Rings Harry Potter and The Chronicles of Narnia film series has helped further this trend Since the 1990s the genre has been marked by the rise of female centric urban fantasy very different from Tolkien s works as shown by the popularity of Laurell K Hamilton s Anita Blake novels and Charlaine Harris The Southern Vampire Mysteries books 88 References edit a b c Michael Moorcock Wizardry amp Wild Romance A Study of Epic Fantasy pp 24 25 ISBN 1 932265 07 4 Manlove Colin 1992 Christian Fantasy from 1200 to the Present Palgrave Macmillan p 12 ISBN 978 0 268 00790 4 Hibbard Laura A 1963 Medieval Romance in England New York Burt Franklin p iii Grant John Clute John 15 March 1999 Malory Sir Thomas The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Macmillan p 621 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Grant John Clute John 15 March 1999 Arthur The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Macmillan pp 60 1 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Grant John Clute John 15 March 1999 Ariosto Lodovico The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Macmillan pp 60 1 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Jack Zipes The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm p 858 ISBN 0 393 97636 X a b L Sprague de Camp Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers The Makers of Heroic Fantasy p 9 11 ISBN 0 87054 076 9 Brian Stableford The A to Z of Fantasy Literature p xx Scarecrow Press Plymouth 2005 ISBN 0 8108 6829 6 Lin Carter ed Realms of Wizardry p xiii xiv Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Marion Lochhead Renaissance of Wonder p1 ISBN 0 06 250520 3 John Grant and John Clute The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Romance p 821 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 John Grant and John Clute The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Gothic fantasy p 424 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Michael Moorcock Wizardry amp Wild Romance A Study of Epic Fantasy p 36 ISBN 1 932265 07 4 Farah Mendlesohn Rhetorics of Fantasy p 121 2 ISBN 0 8195 6868 6 Brian Stableford The A to Z of Fantasy Literature p 40 Scarecrow Press Plymouth 2005 ISBN 0 8108 6829 6 Brian Stableford Undine pp 1992 1994 in Frank N Magill ed Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature Vol 4 Englewood Cliffs NJ Salem Press Inc 1983 ISBN 0 89356 450 8 Mike Ashley Fouque Friedrich Heinrich Karl Baron de la Motte p 654 5 in St James Guide To Fantasy Writers edited by David Pringle St James Press 1996 ISBN 1 55862 205 5 Veronica Ortenberg In Search of the Holy Grail The Quest for the Middle Ages 38 9 Continuum International Publishing Group 2006 ISBN 1 85285 383 2 Penrith Goff E T A Hoffmann pp 111 120 in E F Bleiler Supernatural Fiction Writers Fantasy and Horror New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 D P Haase Ludwig Tieck pp 83 90 in E F Bleiler Supernatural Fiction Writers Fantasy and Horror New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 Franz Rottensteiner The Fantasy Book an illustrated history from Dracula to Tolkien p 137 Collier Books 1978 ISBN 0 02 053560 0 A Richard Oliver Charles Nodier Pilot of Romanticism p 134 37 Syracuse University Press 1964 Brian Stableford The A to Z of Fantasy Literature p 159 Scarecrow Press Plymouth 2005 ISBN 0 8108 6829 6 Brian Stableford Theophile Gautier pp 45 50 in E F Bleiler Supernatural Fiction Writers Fantasy and Horror New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 Ashley Mike 1997 Coleridge Sara In John Clute Grant John eds The Encyclopedia of Fantasy London Orbit p 210 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Roderick McGillis Phantasmion p 1238 1240 in Frank N Magill ed Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature Vol 3 Englewood Cliffs NJ Salem Press Inc 1983 ISBN 0 89356 450 8 a b Stephen Prickett Victorian Fantasy p 56 59 ISBN 0 253 17461 9 a b c Stephen Prickett Victorian Fantasy p 66 67 ISBN 0 253 17461 9 Attebery Brian 2014 Chapter 1 Fantasy as a Route to Myth Stories about Stories Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth Oxford Oxford University Press pp 27 29 ISBN 978 0 19 931607 6 George MacDonald The Fantastic Imagination Reprinted in Boyer Robert H and Zahorski Kenneth J Fantasists on Fantasy New York Avon Discus 1984 pp 11 22 ISBN 0 380 86553 X a b Robert Scholes Boiling Roses in George E Slusser and Eric S Rabkin ed Intersections Fantasy and Science Fiction Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1987 ISBN 080931374X pp 3 18 Gary K Wolfe George MacDonald pp 239 246 in Bleiler E F ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 a b c Lin Carter ed Realms of Wizardry p 2 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 a b Lin Carter ed Kingdoms of Sorcery p 39 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Colin Manlove Christian Fantasy from 1200 to the Present pp 210 212 ISBN 0 268 00790 X Stephen Prickett Victorian Fantasy p 182 ISBN 0 253 17461 9 Stephen Prickett Victorian Fantasy p 98 9 ISBN 0 253 17461 9 M J Elkins Oscar Wilde in E F Bleiler ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 pp 345 350 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 Ursula K Le Guin From Elfland to Poughkeepsie p 78 9 The Language of the Night ISBN 0 425 05205 2 21st Century Gothic Great Gothic Novels Since 2000 From Imaginary to Virtual Worlds An Interview with Historian Michael Saler Part One a b Lin Carter ed Realms of Wizardry p 64 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 J R Pfeiffer Lewis Carroll p 247 54 in E F Bleiler Supernatural Fiction Writers Fantasy and Horror Scribner s New York 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 Brian Stableford The A to Z of Fantasy Literature p 70 3 Scarecrow Press Plymouth 2005 ISBN 0 8108 6829 6 C S Lewis On Juvenile Tastes p 41 Of Other Worlds Essays and Stories ISBN 0 15 667897 7 W R Irwin The Game of the Impossible p 92 3 University of Illinois Press Urbana Chicago London 1976 The term was referenced in a supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary See Michael W McClintock High Tech and High Sorcery Some Discriminations Between Science Fiction and Fantasy in George E Slusser and Eric S Rabkin ed Intersections Fantasy and Science Fiction Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1987 ISBN 080931374X pp 26 35 Orchideengarten Der in M B Tymn and Mike Ashley Science Fiction Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines Westport Greenwood 1985 pp 866 ISBN 0 313 21221 X Robert Weinberg The Weird Tales Story Wildside Press 1999 ISBN 1 58715 101 4 Unknown in M B Tymn and Mike Ashley Science Fiction Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines Westport Greenwood 1985 pp 694 698 ISBN 0 313 21221 X Thomas D Clareson Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in M B Tymn and Mike Ashley Science Fiction Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines Westport Greenwood 1985 pp 377 391 ISBN 0 313 21221 X Charles Hoffman Robert E Howard Twentieth Century Mythmaker in The Best of Robert E Howard Vol 1 Crimson Shadows Del Rey 2007 pp 473 84 ISBN 0 345 49018 5 Diana Waggoner The Hills of Faraway A Guide to Fantasy p 47 8 0 689 10846 X Lin Carter ed Realms of Wizardry p 146 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 L Sprague de Camp Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers The Makers of Heroic Fantasy p 135 ISBN 0 87054 076 9 Michael Moorcock Wizardry amp Wild Romance A Study of Epic Fantasy p 50 ISBN 1 932265 07 4 Lin Carter ed Kingdoms of Sorcery p 85 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Lin Carter ed Realms of Wizardry p 205 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Handbook of New Religions and Cultural Production Brian Stableford The A to Z of Fantasy Literature p 58 9 Scarecrow Press Plymouth 2005 ISBN 0 8108 6829 6 Keith Neilson Thorne Smith pp 805 812 in Bleiler ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 Gary K Wolfe The Circus of Dr Lao p 282 6 in Frank N Magill ed Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature Vol 1 Englewood Cliffs NJ Salem Press Inc 1983 ISBN 0 89356 450 8 a b c d e Brian Stableford Re Enchantment in the Aftermath of War in Stableford Gothic Grotesques Essays on Fantastic Literature Wildside Press 2009 ISBN 978 1 4344 0339 1 David Lindsay by Gary K Wolfe pp 541 548 in E F Bleiler ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 E L Chapman Lud in the Mist in Frank N Magill ed Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature Vol 2 Englewood Cliffs NJ Salem Press Inc 1983 ISBN 0 89356 450 8 pp 926 931 Robin Anne Reid Women in Science Fiction and Fantasy p 39 ABC CLIO 2009 ISBN 0313335915 Michael Moorcock Wizardry amp Wild Romance A Study of Epic Fantasy p 47 ISBN 1 932265 07 4 L Sprague de Camp Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers The Makers of Heroic Fantasy p 132 3 ISBN 0 87054 076 9 L Sprague de Camp Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers The Makers of Heroic Fantasy p 116 ISBN 0 87054 076 9 Lin Carter ed Kingdoms of Sorcery p 121 2 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Lin Carter ed Kingdoms of Sorcery p 136 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Edward Wagenknecht The Little Prince Rides the White Deer Fantasy and Symbolism in Recent Literature College English 7 8 431 437 May 1946 Lin Carter ed Kingdoms of Sorcery p 196 Doubleday and Company Garden City NY 1976 Edward James Tolkien J ohn R onald R euel St James Guide To Fantasy Writers ed David Pringle St James Press 1996 ISBN 1 55862 205 5 pp 558 61 a b Tom Shippey J R R Tolkien Author of the Century pp xx xxi ISBN 0 618 25759 4 The Book of Swords Scroggins Mark 2016 Michael Moorcock Fiction Fantasy and the World s Pain Jefferson NC MacFarland amp Co ISBN 978 1 4766 2417 4 a b Jane Yolen Introduction p vii viii in After the King Stories in Honor of J R R Tolkien ed Martin H Greenberg ISBN 0 312 85175 8 John Grant and John Clute The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Tolkien J ohn R onald R euel p 951 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Robert Irwin Peake Mervyn Laurence St James Guide To Fantasy Writers ed David Pringle St James Press 1996 ISBN 1 55862 205 5 pp 469 70 John Grant and John Clute The Encyclopedia of Fantasy Ballantine Adult Fantasy series p 82 ISBN 0 312 19869 8 Mathews Richard 2002 Fantasy The Liberation of Imagination Routledge p 35 ISBN 978 0 415 93890 7 Locus Online Betsy Wollheim interview excerpts Locus June 2006 Retrieved 2017 12 06 Mendlesohn Farah James Edward 2012 2009 Chapter 9 The 1990s A Short History of Fantasy 2nd ed Faringdon Oxfordshire Libri Publishing pp 143 166 ISBN 978 1 907471 66 7 Roberts Adam 2014 Get Started in Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy Hachette UK p 42 ISBN 978 1444795660 Walter Damien 1 January 2016 Science fiction and fantasy look ahead to a diverse 2016 The Guardian Retrieved 1 January 2016 The Secret History of Fantasy edited by Peter S Beagle Reviewed by Chris Kammerud Archived 2011 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Further reading edit Attebery Brian 1980 The Fantasy Tradition in American Literature From Irving to Le Guin Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253356659 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of fantasy amp oldid 1215363698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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