Felicity Wishes Explained

Felicity Wishes is a British children's book series created by Emma Thomson. The series includes over 140 story books, activity books, picture books and annuals. The popularity of the books led to the launch of a Felicity Wishes magazine [1] and hundreds of other products.

The series is about a fairy called Felicity Wishes and her friends Holly, Polly and Daisy and later on Winnie. Felicity lives in a fictional town called Little Blossoming. Little Blossoming, Bloomfield is in Fairy World. Fairy World is much the same as the human world with several key exceptions: there is no age, birth or death (fairies live forever), no men, no meat-eating, no money, no evil and no crime. Most of the books are set pre-graduation where Felicity goes to the School of Nine Wishes to learn and she eats cake and drinks tea with her friends at Sparkles Cafe. She has also travelled all over Fairy World. In these books Felicity Wishes and her friends both have a single pair of wings, because they still go to school; fairies who have graduated get double wings. Felicity has a constant companion, a little blue bird called Bertie Dishes, the only male character in the whole book series.

Characters

Criticism

In 2007, writing in the UK newspaper The Independent, Katy Guest raised concerns about the message conveyed to young girls by the line of products associated with the Felicity character:

A current advert for a new magazine from the fairy princess Felicity Wishes encourages little girls to dream about their future lives. "Every issue I try out a new job, from cake-maker to nurse, to popstar!" Felicity squeals. "Part 1 comes with a cute Felicity Wishes doll and with every issue, there's a sparkly new outfit to dress her in!" Felicity does not come with an astronaut's costume or a train driver's hat and seems to want little girls to grow up to be homemakers and pop tarts and use too many exclamation marks.[2]

The blog The Alpha Parent iterated similar concerns in a 2012 post analyzing the magazine's series of "dream jobs": "The magazine is an example of how girls are socialised to be *prepared* to accept their place in the sexual division of labour. That is, to aspire to jobs which are less-skilled, lower-paid, and often part-time."[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Felicity Wishes magazine . 2011-07-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120326144246/http://www.ndc.co.nz/index.php?action=magazine&mag=40 . 2012-03-26 . dead .
  2. News: Guest. Katy. Why Britain is going crazy for little princesses. https://web.archive.org/web/20100421064515/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/why-britain-is-going-crazy-for-little-princesses-436636.html. dead. April 21, 2010. 27 May 2012. The Independent (UK). 17 February 2007.
  3. Web site: The Alpha Parent. Careers for Girls According to Felicity Wishes. 27 May 2012.