Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Goblin Market, Christina Georgina Rossetti - Jeanie Watson (essay date 1984)


Goblin Market, Christina Georgina Rossetti - Jeanie Watson (essay date 1984)

Jeanie Watson (essay date 1984)

SOURCE: "'Men Sell Not Such in Any Town': Christina Rossetti's Goblin Fruit of Fairy Tale," in Children 's Literature, Vol. 12, Yale University Press, 1984, pp. 61-77.

[In the following essay, Watson maintains that while the Christian allegorical framework of "Goblin Market" is the means by which the story is made "'acceptable," the fairy tale subtext of the poem subverts the Christian moral of renunciation and extolls the virtues of imagination and knowledge.]

Although "Goblin Market" has long enjoyed a reputation as one of the finest of children's poems1 and has repeatedly been labeled a fairy tale, in line with Christina Rossetti's own insistence on this point, there has been no serious, extensive consideration of "Goblin Market" as a children's poem drawing upon the themes and forms of traditional children's literature. This is true because, in large part, readers from...

[The entire page is 6787 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: