Fairies

£25.00

Author: Francis Young

Social & cultural history | Spirituality & religious experience | Folklore, myths & legends | Monsters & legendary beings

Published on 20th March 2026 by John Wiley and Sons Ltd (Polity Press) in the United Kingdom.

Hardback | 352 pages
236mm x 164mm x 33mm | 650g

Description

Many people think they know what fairies are, what a fairy looks like, and how a fairy is expected to behave. Francis Young’s new history of fairies demonstrates that the truth about belief in fairies is far stranger than clichéd images of tiny figures with wings and wands.

Before the rise of the ‘small winged fairy’ in the nineteenth century, the category of fairies included a vast range of supernatural human-like creatures, from the elves of Scandinavia and the aos sí of Ireland to the vilas of the Balkans and the fadas of Iberia. Young traces the ancient origins of belief in such creatures and how it adapted to the rise of Christianity and then flourished in medieval Europe, before being transformed – but not destroyed – by the upheavals of the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and even European colonial expansion, which made fairies a global phenomenon. He concludes this uniquely wide-ranging history by reflecting on the surprising ways in which fairy belief endures in our apparently disenchanted contemporary world.

No one who reads this brilliant tour through the enchanted pathways of fairyland will ever look at the winged creatures of contemporary popular culture – or the woods at the bottom of their garden – in the same way again.

Additional information

Weight 650 g
Dimensions 236 × 164 × 33 mm

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