The Dark Side of Peter Pan  
J. M. Barrie, the Man Who Couldn’t Grow Up
Author(s): Olivia Camozzi
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399047579
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399047579 Price: INR 960.99
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Explores the complex life of James Barrie, revealing the darker origins of Peter Pan while examining the misunderstandings surrounding his character and sexuality.

James Barrie has been marked in recent years as manipulative, perverted and without the ability to love. Having authored the story of Peter Pan, which has been enjoyed by children and adults for over 100 years, many literary critics have been intrigued about where this story epitomising childhood joy and innocence came from. Most will associate Peter Pan with Disney’s colorful version, but the original story that Barrie penned is actually much darker, with a gloomier background in its making.

With humble beginnings from a small town in Scotland, Barrie’s childhood was filled with grief and loss, but also stories and play. He took his passion of storytelling to study English Literature at university before finding himself in the capital for all writers: central London. It was here that he came to meet the Llewelyn Davies family. His involvement with this upper-class family with relatives including Daphne du Maurier are what many say to be the sole inspiration for Peter Pan, and that his integration into the family was primarily with sinister intentions.

Much of his writing reflected his life, including his marriage and the unhappiness that spanned from it, all of which can be found in traces throughout Peter Pan. The Peter that Barrie wrote was not just a boy that didn’t want to grow up, but a being that was neither human nor not human, with complexities that can only be understood if Barrie’s life is also looked into.

This book aims to prove that much of the speculation and accusations surrounding Barrie and his nature have come from a time of misunderstanding, where many psychological terms were not coined and sexuality was a taboo subject. With the latest claims that Barrie was manipulative and perverted, these critics overlooked the likelihood that Barrie was asexual, as well as suffering from Peter Pan Syndrome. With a life littered with loss, it’s clear that Barrie did not go through his life unscathed, but is it fair to mark him as the bad man he’s recently been painted to be, especially after providing one of the most popular stories of all time?
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Explores the complex life of James Barrie, revealing the darker origins of Peter Pan while examining the misunderstandings surrounding his character and sexuality.

James Barrie has been marked in recent years as manipulative, perverted and without the ability to love. Having authored the story of Peter Pan, which has been enjoyed by children and adults for over 100 years, many literary critics have been intrigued about where this story epitomising childhood joy and innocence came from. Most will associate Peter Pan with Disney’s colorful version, but the original story that Barrie penned is actually much darker, with a gloomier background in its making.

With humble beginnings from a small town in Scotland, Barrie’s childhood was filled with grief and loss, but also stories and play. He took his passion of storytelling to study English Literature at university before finding himself in the capital for all writers: central London. It was here that he came to meet the Llewelyn Davies family. His involvement with this upper-class family with relatives including Daphne du Maurier are what many say to be the sole inspiration for Peter Pan, and that his integration into the family was primarily with sinister intentions.

Much of his writing reflected his life, including his marriage and the unhappiness that spanned from it, all of which can be found in traces throughout Peter Pan. The Peter that Barrie wrote was not just a boy that didn’t want to grow up, but a being that was neither human nor not human, with complexities that can only be understood if Barrie’s life is also looked into.

This book aims to prove that much of the speculation and accusations surrounding Barrie and his nature have come from a time of misunderstanding, where many psychological terms were not coined and sexuality was a taboo subject. With the latest claims that Barrie was manipulative and perverted, these critics overlooked the likelihood that Barrie was asexual, as well as suffering from Peter Pan Syndrome. With a life littered with loss, it’s clear that Barrie did not go through his life unscathed, but is it fair to mark him as the bad man he’s recently been painted to be, especially after providing one of the most popular stories of all time?
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1: All Children, except One, Grow up 1860–1878
  • Chapter 2: I Don’T Want Ever to be a Man 1878–1884
  • Chapter 3: There is Something She Wants to be to Me, but She Says It is Not My Mother 1884–1897
  • Chapter 4: There Never Was a Simpler Happier Family until the Coming of Peter Pan 1897–1900
  • Chapter 5: Come Away, Come Away! 1901–1904
  • Chapter 6: “Do You Know,” Peter Asked, “Why Swallows Build in the Eaves of Houses? It is to Listen to the Stories” 1904–1905
  • Chapter 7: So the Older Ones Have Become Glassy- Eyed and Seldom Speak… but the Little Ones Still Wonder 1905–1907
  • Chapter 8: “If Only You Could be This Way Forever!” 1907–1909
  • Chapter 9: Never is an Awfully Long Time 1909–1910
  • Chapter 10: They are the Eyes a Mother Leaves behind to Guard Her Children 1910–1912
  • Chapter 11: Stars are Beautiful, but They May Not Take Part in Anything, They Must Just Look on Forever 1912–1914
  • Chapter 12: Peter Was Not Quite like Other Boys; but He Was Afraid at Last 1914–1915
  • Chapter 13: Do You Believe in Fairies? 1915–1917
  • Chapter 14: You Can Have Anything in Life If You Will Sacrifice Everything Else for It 1917–1918
  • Chapter 15: The Moment You Doubt Whether You Can Fly, You Cease for Ever to be Able to Do It 1918–1921
  • Chapter 16: To Die Will be an Awfully Big Adventure 1921–1937
  • Chapter 17: I Suppose It’S like the Ticking Crocodile, Isn’T It? Time is Chasing after All of Us 1937–1980
  • Epilogue
  • Sources
  • Notes
  • Plates
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