Snow White (Barthelme novel) explained

Snow White
Cover Artist:Lawrence Ratzkin
Language:English
Genre:Fantasy fiction
Postmodernism
Publisher:Atheneum Books
Release Date:1967
Media Type:Print
Pages:181
Isbn:978-0-684-82479-6

Snow White is a post-modernist novel by author Donald Barthelme published in 1967 by Atheneum Books.[1] The book inverts the fairy tale of the same name by highlighting the form by discussing the different expectations and compromises the characters make to survive in their world. This is done through Barthelme's fragmentary rhetoric and discourse, by shifting perspectives from the seven "dwarves" or Snow White herself, as well as the wicked step-mother, "Jane".[2] It was Barthelme's first novel, published seven years after he started having his short stories published in literary magazines and publications such as The New Yorker.

Notes and References

  1. Montresor . Jaye Berman . Sanitization and its Discontents: Refuse and Refusal in Donald Barthelme's "Snow White" . Studies in American Humor . 1989 . 7 . 2 . 74–84 . 42573293 .
  2. Fischer . Meredith . Snow White Wars: Adapting Animation in Donald Barthelme's "Snow White" . Literature/Film Quarterly . 2016 . 44 . 1 . 34–47 . 43799045 .