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Once Upon a Blind Girl: Disability and Fairy Tale in Charles Dickens’s The Cricket on the Hearth Cover

Once Upon a Blind Girl: Disability and Fairy Tale in Charles Dickens’s The Cricket on the Hearth

By: György Kiss  
Open Access
|Nov 2024

Abstract

The paper offers a close reading of Charles Dickens’s Christmas novella, The Cricket on the Hearth: A Fairy Tale of Home (1845), through the lens of fairy tales and disability studies. One of the main characters of the story is Bertha Plummer, a blind doll’s dressmaker. Since her father deceives and hides the truth from her, Bertha is unaware of the real nature of her economic and social circumstances as a disabled, working-class woman. Her disability is crucial to the plot as it is strongly connected to the novella’s themes of domestic infidelity, disguise, and the lack of perspective or understanding. The paper analyzes how Dickens explores these ideas through Bertha’s blindness with the use of fairy tales. It relies on academic sources written about Bertha, fairy tales, as well as disability and Victorian gender roles. (GyK)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/hjeas/2024/30/2/11 | Journal eISSN: 2732-0421 | Journal ISSN: 1218-7364
Language: English
Page range: 481 - 499
Published on: Nov 21, 2024
Published by: University of Debrecen
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2024 György Kiss, published by University of Debrecen
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.