Although classical education is waning and general historical knowledge is at its nadir, many ancient fables are still widely known and commonly cited in spoken language. For example, Aesop’s fable The Boy Who Cried Wolf has resulted in the phrase “crying wolf,” which—even today—is a cultural shorthand for expressing the idea of raising a false alarm. The successful communication of this idea, however, rests on culture: the shared understanding of the wolf as dangerous. If we thought of wolves as we do pet dogs, the reference would be lost.Fables constitute a subgenre of ancient Near Eastern ‘wisdom literature;’ they are short narratives utilizing anthropomorphized animals to impart conventional wisdom. Like proverbs, fables “belong to the ...
Cognitive theory of metaphor has changed our understanding of metaphor as a figurative device to a m...
Sheep feature in various animal fables. Marino & Merskin suggest that “we” view sheep as “docile, pa...
Through this paper I am going to argue that animals from the Middle Ages held more worth and were of...
Although classical education is waning and general historical knowledge is at its nadir, many ancien...
Animals have a minor role / are poorly represented in Sumerian narratives, apart from their presence...
Archilochus’ poetry makes particuarly dense use of animal fable, and the fame of his fables were an ...
This article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
This chapter examines the tensions between the symbolic valence of anthropomorphic animals and authe...
Animals play an important role in the communication of wisdom. In songs, proverbs, aphorisms, riddle...
Stories play a significant role in schema development as they can shape the reader’s view. Children'...
Schönbeck S. “‘Sire,’ says the fox”: The Zoopoetics and Zoopolitics of the Fable in Kleist’s “On the...
This article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
This article points to stylistic and cognitive function of animals in two educational books of the ...
As oral and written record reflects, throughout history humankind has vacillated between acknowledgi...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study is a re-examination of Middle English animal fabl...
Cognitive theory of metaphor has changed our understanding of metaphor as a figurative device to a m...
Sheep feature in various animal fables. Marino & Merskin suggest that “we” view sheep as “docile, pa...
Through this paper I am going to argue that animals from the Middle Ages held more worth and were of...
Although classical education is waning and general historical knowledge is at its nadir, many ancien...
Animals have a minor role / are poorly represented in Sumerian narratives, apart from their presence...
Archilochus’ poetry makes particuarly dense use of animal fable, and the fame of his fables were an ...
This article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
This chapter examines the tensions between the symbolic valence of anthropomorphic animals and authe...
Animals play an important role in the communication of wisdom. In songs, proverbs, aphorisms, riddle...
Stories play a significant role in schema development as they can shape the reader’s view. Children'...
Schönbeck S. “‘Sire,’ says the fox”: The Zoopoetics and Zoopolitics of the Fable in Kleist’s “On the...
This article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
This article points to stylistic and cognitive function of animals in two educational books of the ...
As oral and written record reflects, throughout history humankind has vacillated between acknowledgi...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study is a re-examination of Middle English animal fabl...
Cognitive theory of metaphor has changed our understanding of metaphor as a figurative device to a m...
Sheep feature in various animal fables. Marino & Merskin suggest that “we” view sheep as “docile, pa...
Through this paper I am going to argue that animals from the Middle Ages held more worth and were of...