This chapter examines the tensions between the symbolic valence of anthropomorphic animals and authentic concerns about real animals in fables of ancient times. It provides an overview of sources and scholarly approach in this study of the Graeco-Latin fable and explores the boundaries between human and animal in early Greek fable-telling. This chapter suggests that the fable tradition occasionally eschews symbolism and anthropomorphism entirely, which reveals a deep and abiding interest in animal behaviour and in material that could be considered as natural history. It also mentions that the fable was linked to the lower classes and affiliated with slaves in antiquity
“If someone has considered the study of the other animals to lack value, he ought to think the same ...
Babrius' collection of Greek fables from the Second Sophistic period is positively brimming with exa...
This chapter examines the role of animals in divination in ancient times. It discusses ancient obser...
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 article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
"The Archetypal Value of the Animal in Aesop’s Fables." As a real, or even mythical or mythological ...
This dissertation examines animals in Greek and Roman literature and the use of zoological knowledge...
Stories play a significant role in schema development as they can shape the reader’s view. Children'...
Aesop is a peculiar authorial figure: Although no birthplace, fable, event, or anecdote can be secur...
This thesis is an analysis of the Aesop fable "Eagle and Beetle" that is found in the comedy of Aris...
Nicholas Howe includes fables among “other troubling works that cross adult distinctions between the...
Animals have come into their own as subjects for research across the Humanities, and recent work foc...
This paper argues that Aesopic fables are an under-used but valuable resource for the study of Graec...
Although classical education is waning and general historical knowledge is at its nadir, many ancien...
“If someone has considered the study of the other animals to lack value, he ought to think the same ...
Babrius' collection of Greek fables from the Second Sophistic period is positively brimming with exa...
This chapter examines the role of animals in divination in ancient times. It discusses ancient obser...
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 article deals with Greek animal fables, traditionally attributed to a former slave, Aesop, who ...
"The Archetypal Value of the Animal in Aesop’s Fables." As a real, or even mythical or mythological ...
This dissertation examines animals in Greek and Roman literature and the use of zoological knowledge...
Stories play a significant role in schema development as they can shape the reader’s view. Children'...
Aesop is a peculiar authorial figure: Although no birthplace, fable, event, or anecdote can be secur...
This thesis is an analysis of the Aesop fable "Eagle and Beetle" that is found in the comedy of Aris...
Nicholas Howe includes fables among “other troubling works that cross adult distinctions between the...
Animals have come into their own as subjects for research across the Humanities, and recent work foc...
This paper argues that Aesopic fables are an under-used but valuable resource for the study of Graec...
Although classical education is waning and general historical knowledge is at its nadir, many ancien...
“If someone has considered the study of the other animals to lack value, he ought to think the same ...
Babrius' collection of Greek fables from the Second Sophistic period is positively brimming with exa...
This chapter examines the role of animals in divination in ancient times. It discusses ancient obser...