Derivative and Transformative Works
and sanitized. And imitation and parody built on the strengths of already popular books.
The Butterfly’s Ball and the Grasshopper’s Feast evoked a host of similar poetic accounts of parties given by animals, but The Butterfly’s Funeral is the only true sequel; the guests from the Ball return to mourn their host.
Goody Two Shoes’ Birthday gathers a coterie of well-known literary figures: the hostess; the fabled Dick Whittington; Pompey the Little, canine hero of a 1751 satire on fashionable society; and Old Mother Hubbard.
The Tales retells some of Shakespeare’s plays for a juvenile audience, removing anything inappropriate for young readers.
Robinson Crusoe represents an extreme condensation of a long narrative — the original text filled 364 pages, while the chapbook has 16. T
he author of Elsie’s Expedition imitated and reused story structure, setting, and events; he wrote in a foreword, ‘I admit that this book would, in all probability never have been written, had I not seen “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.”’
The Egyptian Struwwelpeter is a spoof of Hoffman’s parodic cautionary verses.
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J. L. B. The Butterfly’s Funeral: A Sequel to The Butterfly’s Ball and Grasshopper’s Feast. London: John Wallis, Jun., 1808.
A History of Goody Two Shoes’ Birth-Day, in Verse. London: J. Aldis, Printed for the proprietor, and sold by the booksellers and toymen, 1809
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Lamb, Charles and Mary. Tales from Shakespear: Designed for the Use of Young Persons. London: Printed for Thomas Hodgkins, 1807.
Cruikshank, George, illustrator. Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Banbury: Printed by J.G. Rusher, 1814.
Weatherly, Frederic Edward. Elsie’s Expedition. London (Bedford Street, Strand): Frederick Warne and Co., 1874.
Netolitzky, Fritz. The Egyptian Struwwelpeter: Being the Struwwelpeter Papyrus: with Full Text and 100 Original Vignettes from the Vienna Papyri. London: H. Grevel & Co., 1896.