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Second star to the right: Peter Pan in the popular imagination
Allison Kavey and Lester D. Friedman
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page ix)
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Peter Pan Chronology (page xi)
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Introduction: From Peanut Butter Jars to the Silver Screen (ALLISON B. KAVEY, page 1)
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1 Tinker Bell, the Fairy of Electricity (MURRAY POMERANCE, page 13)
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2 "To die will be an awfully big adventure": Peter Pan in World War I (LINDA ROBERTSON, page 50)
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3 "I do believe in fairies, I do, I do": The History and Epistemology of Peter Pan (ALLISON B. KAVEY, page 75)
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4 "Shadow of [a] girl": An Examination of Peter Pan in Performance (PATRICK B. TUITE, page 105)
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5 Peter Pan and the Possibilities of Child Literature (MARTHA STODDARD HOLMES, page 132)
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6 Disney's Peter Pan: Gender, Fantasy, and Industrial Production (SUSAN OHMER, page 151)
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7 Hooked on Pan: Barrie's Immortal Pirate in Fiction and Film (LESTER D. FRIEDMAN, page 188)
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8 "Gay, Innocent, and Heartless": Peter Pan and the Queering of Popular Culture (DAVID P.D. MUNNS, page 219)
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9 Peter and Me (or How I Learned to Fly): Network Television Broadcasts of Peter Pan (THERESA JONES, page 243)
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List of Contributors (page 265)
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Index (page 269)
Citable Link
Published: c2009
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
- 9780813544366 (hardcover)
- 9780813546223 (ebook)
- 9780813544373 (paper)