Abstract
This essay uses Neil Gaiman’s Stardust, The Sleeper and the Spindle, and “Chivalry,” to examine the intersection of age and gender in his fairy-tale appropriations to consider how fantasy can reiterate stereotypical representations of older women. By drawing on the age studies work of Sylvia Henneberg and Susan Pickard to consider ageism as a cross-section to gendered constructions in Gaiman’s works, I make visible how age affects perception and construction of gender, which can lead to the intertwining of age stereotypes and gendered double standards.
Recommended Citation
Anjirbag, Michelle Anya. "No Country for Old Women: Age, Power, and Beauty in Neil Gaiman’s Fantasies." Marvels & Tales 37.1 (2023). Web. <https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/marvels/vol37/iss1/2>.