rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2021-04-19 12:02 pm

When did we stop caring that elves aren't real?

Starting around the 1950s, a number of books in English for children had the message that magic isn't real. Helpfully for the historical cause, many of them won Newbery Medals or Honor, so they are very easy to come across.

The basic plot is that Protagonist Kid meets a kid (Tragic Kid) who claims that magic (elves, etc) is real. The kids do magic spells, make elf homes, etc. Protagonist Kid usually isn't sure that the magic is real, but wants to believe that it is. At the end it is revealed that magic is definitely not real, there are no elves, and Tragic Kid was making it all up to cover up for the fact that their father is abusive/their mother is an addict/they have no parents and are living alone/etc. Protagonist Kid is sadder but wiser.

There are variants on this, such as Bridge to Terabithia, in which no one ever believes that the magic is real - it's explicitly a game - but it ends in tragedy anyway.

I recently came across an example of this, published in 1996, and realized that it is the most recent example I can recall of the genre. Am I missing examples of it, or did they stop getting written or published?

The thing that has always struck me most about this genre is that it's a solution in search of a problem. Kids believing in magic and elves and so forth is not actually a big social problem, but the books treat it as if is. They are written as if the belief must be broken with a devastating shock, when in reality, most kids gradually learn that their parents are Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy, without the need for a dramatic revelation.

Those are also beliefs which are over way before kids are old enough to read the "there's no such thing as magic" books. The books aren't teaching kids there's no such thing as magic, because by the time they're old enough to read them they already know that. They're actually teaching them that if they read a book hoping that it's fantasy, it may in fact be a book about how fantasy isn't real.

Anyway, the genre thankfully seems to have died the death. But that made me wonder about some things. Why was this ever considered worthwhile to begin with? Why is it always fantasy book-style magic that needs to be dispelled, rather than the sort of supernatural things that people really do believe in as adults, like crystal healing and possession by demons and magical-type conspiracy theories?

starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)

[personal profile] starlady 2021-04-19 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Also crystal healing and conspiracy theories hadn't really been invented yet! Both are offshoots of the 1960s and 1970s counterculture, which was both anti-science and anti-government. Obviously the big exception in conspiracy theories is antisemitic stuff like the protocols of Zion, which had been around for quite a while, but the invention of the national security state in this same period really goosed conspiracy theories, partly because many of them weren't wholly untrue in the era of Cointelpro and the like. It's not paranoia if they really are out to get you.
recessional: a photo image of feet in sparkly red shoes (Default)

[personal profile] recessional 2021-04-19 10:30 pm (UTC)(link)

XD I mean true but there were plenty of weird Woo things that occupied the same place as crystal healing all the way back past the beginning of the century; just looking more at spiritualism and so on, rather than "crystal vibrations". The specific outfits changed, but the core tendency was very solid.

Mostly: Educating Children Properly (with ~* good literature*~ with ~* great literary merit and value*~) was supposed to make it so that they would be safe from any of that kind of influence and would be Clear Eyed and blah blah blah fishcakes.