Fairy Tale Review: The Translucent Issue #13
Majda Gama, Rachel Zavecz, Ann Glaviano, Benjamin Schaefer, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, Kevin Wilson, Jonathan Louis Duckworth, Taisia Kitaiskaia, Sara Wainscott, Adam Soto, Sam Meekings, Gillian Cummings, Bradly Sergio Brandt, Jenneva Kayser, Marie Marandola, Nazli Pearl, Maura Pellettieri, C Samuel Rees, Erika Rier, Anastasia Stelse, Caroline Belle Stewart, Elizabeth Horner Turner, Kathryn Davis, Jefferson Navicky, Kelly Dulaney, Alicia Bones, Gretchen Steele Pratt, Shelley Wong, Kate Bernheimer, Stephanie Cawley
The Translucent Issue is a break from tradition. In some ways, colors are an easier, more obvious entry point into the world of fairy tales. It is not transparent, and thus never explicit on the page—the Brothers Grimm rarely editorialized—but then again psychology is rarely explicit. It is a partial view, one that permits shape and light, but not clarity, not exactness; it is a half-truth, one that includes what is as often as it includes what could be; it is the fantasy of wish, and the dubious luxury of pretense. Fairy-tale psychology is not clarified through the use of interiority or analysis, but by situation, circumstance. It is illuminated by what is seen and, just as importantly, what is not.
Publisher
Wayne State University Press