Fable is a literary genre defined as a succinct fictional story, in prose or verse, that features animals, legendary creatures, plants, inanimate objects, or forces of nature that are anthropomorphized, and that illustrates or leads to a particular moral lesson (a "moral"), which may at the end be added explicitly as a concise maxim or saying.
A fable differs from a parable in that the latter excludes animals, plants, inanimate objects, and forces of nature as actors that assume speech or other powers of humankind. Conversely, an animal tale specifically includes talking animals as characters.
A person who writes fables is referred to as a fabulist.
History
The fable is one of the most enduring forms of folk literature, spread abroad, modern researchers agree,[3] less by literary anthologies than by oral transmission. Fables can be found in the literature of almost every country.
Aesopic or Aesop's fable
The varying corpus denoted Aesopica or Aesop's Fables includes most of the best-known western fables, which are attributed to the legendaryAesop, supposed to have been a slave in ancient Greece around 550 BCE. When Babrius set down fables from the Aesopica in verse for a Hellenistic Prince "Alexander", he expressly stated at the head of Book II that this type of "myth" that Aesop had introduced to the "sons of the Hellenes" had been an invention of "Syrians" from the time of "Ninos" (personifying Nineveh to Greeks) and Belos ("ruler").[4]Epicharmus of Kos and Phormis are reported as having been among the first to invent comic fables.[5] Many familiar fables of Aesop include "The Crow and the Pitcher", "The Tortoise and the Hare" and "The Lion and the Mouse".
In the first century AD, Phaedrus (died 50 AD) produced Latin translations in iambic verse of fables then circulating under the name of Aesop. While Phaedrus's Latinizations became classic (transmitted through the Middle Ages, though attributed to a certain Romulus, now considered legendary), the writing of fables in Greek did not stop; in the 2nd century AD, Babrius wrote beast fables in Greek in the manner of Aesop, which would also become influential in the Middle Ages (and sometimes transmitted as Aesop's work).[citation needed]
In ancient Greek and Roman education, the fable was the first of the progymnasmata—training exercises in prose composition and public speaking—wherein students would be asked to learn fables, expand upon them, invent their own, and finally use them as persuasive examples in longer forensic or deliberative speeches. The need of instructors to teach, and students to learn, a wide range of fables as material for their declamations resulted in their being gathered together in collections, like those of Aesop.[citation needed]
Africa
African oral culture[6] has a rich story-telling tradition. As they have for thousands of years, people of all ages in Africa continue to interact with nature, including plants, animals and earthly structures such as rivers, plains, and mountains. Children and, to some extent, adults are mesmerized by good story-tellers when they become animated in their quest to tell a good fable.
The Anansi oral story originates from the tribes of Ghana. "All Stories Are Anansi's" was translated by Harold Courlander and Albert Kofi Prempeh and tells the story of a god-like creature Anansi who wishes to own all stories in the world.[7] The character Anansi is often depicted as a spider and is known for its cunning nature to obtain what it wants, typically seen outwitting other animal characters.[7]
Joel Chandler Harris wrote African-American fables in the Southern context of slavery under the name of Uncle Remus. His stories of the animal characters Brer Rabbit, Brer Fox, and Brer Bear are modern examples of African-American story-telling, this though should not transcend critiques and controversies as to whether or not Uncle Remus was a racist or apologist for slavery. The Disney movie Song of the South introduced many of the stories to the public and others not familiar with the role that storytelling played in the life of cultures and groups without training in speaking, reading, writing, or the cultures to which they had been relocated to from world practices of capturing Africans and other indigenous populations to provide slave labor to colonized countries.[citation needed]
India
India has a rich tradition of fables, many derived from traditional stories and related to local natural elements. Indian fables often teach a particular moral.[8] In some stories the gods have animal aspects, while in others the characters are archetypal talking animals similar to those found in other cultures. Hundreds of fables were composed in ancient India during the first millennium BCE, often as stories withinframe stories. Indian fables have a mixed cast of humans and animals. The dialogues are often longer than in fables of Aesop and often comical as the animals try to outwit one another by trickery and deceit. In Indian fables, humanity is not presented as superior to the animals. Prime examples of the fable in India are the Panchatantra and the Jataka tales. These included Vishnu Sarma's Panchatantra, the Hitopadesha, Vikram and The Vampire, and Syntipas' Seven Wise Masters, which were collections of fables that were later influential throughout the Old World. Ben E. Perry (compiler of the "Perry Index" of Aesop's fables) has argued controversially that some of the Buddhist Jataka tales and some of the fables in the Panchatantra may have been influenced by similar Greek and Near Eastern ones.[9] Earlier Indian epics such as Vyasa'sMahabharata and Valmiki's Ramayana also contained fables within the main story, often as side stories or back-story. The most famous folk stories from the Near East were the One Thousand and One Nights, also known as the Arabian Nights.
The Panchatantra is an ancient Indian assortment of fables. The earliest recorded work, ascribed to Vishnu Sharma, dates to around 300 BCE. The tales are likely much older than the compilation, having been passed down orally prior to the book's compilation. The word "Panchatantra" is a blend of the words "pancha" (which means "five" in Sanskrit) and "tantra" (which means "weave"). It implies weaving together multiple threads of narrative and moral lessons together to form a book.
Europe
Fables had a further long tradition through the Middle Ages and became part of European high literature.
Fables had a further long tradition through the Middle Ages and became part of European high literature. The Roman writer Avianus (active around 400 AD) wrote Latin fables mostly based on Babrius, using very little material from Aesop. Fables attributed to Aesop circulated widely in collections bearing the title of Romulus (as though an author named Romulus had translated and rewritten them, though today most scholars regard this Romulus to be a legendary figure). Many of these Latin version were in fact Phaedrus's 1st-century versified Latinizations. Collections titled Romulus inspired a flurry of medieval authors to newly translate (sometimes into local vernaculars), versify and rewrite fables. Among them, Adémar de Chabannes (11th century), Alexander Neckam (12th century, Novus Aesopus and shorter Novus Avianus), Gualterus Anglicus (12th century) and Marie de France (12th-13th century) wrote fables adapted from models generally understood to be Aesop, Avianus or the so-called "Romulus".[citation needed]
In the later Middle Ages, Aesop's fables were newly gathered and edited with a prefatory biography of Aesop. This biography, usually simply titled Life of Aesop (Vita Aesopi), is more invented than factual, and itself a sort of moralistic fable; known in several versions, this Aesop Romance, as scholars term it today, enjoyed nearly as much fame as the fables themselves by the end of the fifteenth century. The most common version of this tale-like biography is attributed to the Byzantine scholar Maximus Planudes (1260–1310), who also gathered and edited fables for posterity. In the Renaissance, Aesopic fables were hugely popular. They were published in luxurious illuminated manuscripts, such as the so-called "Medici Aesop" made around 1480 in Florence based on the corpus established by Planudes, probably for the son of Lorenzo de' Medici (now kept in the New York Public Library). Early on, Aesopic fables were also disseminated in print, usually with Planudes's Life of Aesop as a preface. The German humanist Heinrich Steinhöwel published a bilingual (Latin and German) edition of the fables in Ulm in 1476. This publication gave rise to many re-editions of the sole German prose translation (known as the Esopus or Esopus teutsch). It became one the great bestsellers of the last decades of the fifteenth century. Several authors adapted or versified fables from this corpus, such as the German poet and playwright Burkard Waldis, whose versified Esopus of 1548 was influential. Even the artist and polymath Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) composed some fables in his native Florentine dialect.[citation needed]
In modern times, while the fable has been trivialized in children's books, it has also been fully adapted to modern adult literature. Felix Salten's Bambi (1923) is a Bildungsroman—a story of a protagonist's coming-of-age—cast in the form of a fable. James Thurber used the ancient fable style in his books Fables for Our Time (1940) and Further Fables for Our Time (1956), and in his stories "The Princess and the Tin Box" in The Beast in Me and Other Animals (1948) and "The Last Clock: A Fable for the Time, Such As It Is, of Man" in Lanterns and Lances (1961). Władysław Reymont's The Revolt (1922), a metaphor for the BolshevikRevolution of 1917, described a revolt by animals that take over their farm in order to introduce "equality". George Orwell's Animal Farm (1945) similarly satirized Stalinist Communism in particular, and totalitarianism in general, in the guise of animal fable.
In the 21st century, the Neapolitan writer Sabatino Scia is the author of more than two hundred fables that he describes as "western protest fables". The characters are not only animals, but also things, beings, and elements from nature. Scia's aim is the same as in the traditional fable, playing the role of revealer of human society. In Latin America, the brothers Juan and Victor Ataucuri Garcia have contributed to the resurgence of the fable. But they do so with a novel idea: use the fable as a means of dissemination of traditional literature of that place. In the book "Fábulas Peruanas"Archived 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine, published in 2003, they have collected myths, legends, and beliefs of Andean and Amazonian Peru, to write as fables. The result has been an extraordinary work rich in regional nuances. Here we discover the relationship between man and his origin, with nature, with its history, its customs and beliefs then become norms and values.[clarification needed][20]
^For example, in First Timothy, "neither give heed to fables...", and "refuse profane and old wives' fables..." (1 Tim 1:4 and 4:4, respectively).
^
Strong's 3454. μύθος muthos moo’-thos; perhaps from the same as 3453 (through the idea of tuition); a tale, i.e. fiction ("myth"):—fable. "For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty." (2nd Peter 1:16)
^Enzyklopädie des Märchens (1977), see "Fabel", "Äsopica" etc.
^Kermode, Mark (30 July 2013). "The Devil's Backbone: The Past Is Never Dead . . ". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 25 June 2016. For those with a weakness for the beautiful monsters of modern cinema, del Toro has earned himself a reputation as the finest living exponent of fabulist film.
Artikel ini tidak memiliki referensi atau sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak bisa dipastikan. Tolong bantu perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan referensi yang layak. Tulisan tanpa sumber dapat dipertanyakan dan dihapus sewaktu-waktu.Cari sumber: Klampok, Wanasari, Brebes – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR KlampokDesaNegara IndonesiaProvinsiJawa TengahKabupatenBrebesKecamatanWanasariKode pos52252Kode Kemendagri33.29.08.2007 ...
Belahan dada seorang wanita Belahan dada (bahasa Inggris: cleavage) adalah cekungan sempit atau cekungan di antara payudara manusia. Bagian atas belahan dada dapat ditonjolkan oleh pakaian seperti garis leher berpotongan rendah yang memperlihatkan bagian tersebut. Joseph Breen, kepala Administrasi Kode Produksi industri film AS, menciptakan istilah Cleavage dalam arti saat ini ketika mengevaluasi film The Outlaw tahun 1943, yang dibintangi oleh Jane Russell. Istilah ini dijelaskan dalam majal...
Argentine football manager In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Caruso and the second or maternal family name is Lombardi. Ricardo Caruso Lombardi Ricardo Caruso Lombardi during a talk with students from the University of PalermoPersonal informationFull name Ricardo Daniel Caruso LombardiDate of birth (1962-02-10) 10 February 1962 (age 62)Place of birth Buenos Aires, ArgentinaHeight 1.66 m (5 ft 5 in)Position(s) MidfielderTeam informationCurrent t...
U.S. House district for Missouri MO-7 redirects here. The term may also refer to Missouri Route 7. Missouri's 7th congressional districtInteractive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023Representative Eric BurlisonR–OzarkDistribution59.28% urban40.72% ruralPopulation (2022)785,669Median householdincome$56,419[1]Ethnicity82.8% White6.1% Hispanic6.0% Two or more races2.0% Black1.5% Asian0.9% Native American0.7% otherCook PVIR+24[2] Missouri's 7th congressional ...
1792–1797 battles between French revolutionaries and neighbouring monarchies War of the First CoalitionPart of the French Revolutionary Wars and the Coalition Wars War of the first coalition Click an image to load the appropriate article.Left to right, top to bottom:Battles of Valmy, Toulon, Fleurus, Quiberon, Arcole and MantuaDate20 April 1792 – 17 October 1797(5 years, 5 months and 4 weeks)LocationFrance, Central Europe, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain, West Indie...
Camp MillsPusat Konsentrasi PenerbanganGarden City,[1] Long Island, New York Perkemahan para prajurit National Guard di Camp Mills, New York yang dilatih untuk bertugas dalam Perang Dunia ILokasi Camp Mills.Koordinat40°43′32″N 73°36′58″W / 40.72556°N 73.61611°W / 40.72556; -73.61611Sejarah situsDibangun1917 (1917) Camp Albert L. Mills (Camp Mills) adalah sebuah instalasi militer di Long Island, New York. Tempat tersebut berjarak sekitar sepuluh...
Ministry of Agriculture農業部Nóngyè Bù (Mandarin)Nùng-ngia̍p Phu (Hakka)Ministry of Agriculture HQAgency overviewFormed1912 (as Ministry of Basic Industries)1984 (as Council of Agriculture)[1]2023 (as Ministry of Agriculture)Preceding agenciesAgriculture BureauCouncil for Agricultural Planning and DevelopmentJurisdictionGovernment of the Republic of ChinaHeadquartersZhongzheng, TaipeiMinisters responsibleChen Junne-jih, Acting MinisterChen Tain-shou, Tu Wen-jane, Deputy Minist...
Village in Illinois, United StatesBensenvilleVillageVillage of BensenvilleDowntown Bensenville FlaglogoMotto: Gateway to OpportunityLocation of Bensenville in DuPage County and Cook County, Illinois.Location of Illinois in the United StatesCoordinates: 41°57′29″N 87°56′45″W / 41.95806°N 87.94583°W / 41.95806; -87.94583CountryUnited StatesStateIllinoisCountyDuPage, CookTownshipAddison, LeydenGovernment • Typecouncil–manager • ...
Borough in Estonia Small borough in Lääne-Viru County, EstoniaVäike-MaarjaSmall boroughVäike-Maarja central square with the G. Lurich monumentVäike-MaarjaLocation in EstoniaCoordinates: 59°07′41″N 26°15′05″E / 59.12806°N 26.25139°E / 59.12806; 26.25139Country EstoniaCounty Lääne-Viru CountyMunicipality Väike-Maarja ParishPopulation (01.01.2008) • Total2,005 Väike-Maarja society house Väike-Maarja, main street Väike-Maarja is...
Historic site in Suffolk, EnglandLawshall HallLawshall HallLocationThe Street, Lawshall, Suffolk, EnglandCoordinates52°09′17″N 0°43′20″E / 52.154812°N 0.722342°E / 52.154812; 0.722342BuiltMid sixteenth century Listed Building – Grade II*Official nameLawshall HallDesignated10 January 1953 Location in Suffolk Lawshall Hall is a Grade II* listed building, re-built in 1557, that is located in the parish of Lawshall in Suffolk.[1] The Hall is adjacent...
Italian football player and manager (1940–2022) Bruno Bolchi Bolchi (right) in 1962Personal informationDate of birth (1940-02-21)21 February 1940Place of birth Milan, ItalyDate of death 27 September 2022(2022-09-27) (aged 82)Place of death Florence, ItalyHeight 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)Position(s) MidfielderSenior career*Years Team Apps (Gls)1958–1963 Inter 109 (10)1963–1964 Verona 19 (0)1964–1965 Atalanta 25 (2)1965–1970 Torino 89 (0)1970-1972 Pro Patria 25 (0)Internat...
American swimming coach Don GambrilGambril, as 1984 Olympic Swim CoachBiographical detailsBorn(1934-01-02)January 2, 1934Altamont, KansasAlma materCalifornia State University, Los Angeles ('60)Playing career1951-1952East Los Angeles Jr. College1952-1953Occidental College1956-1957U.S. NavyAll Navy Swim Team Coaching career (HC unless noted)Swimming Coach 1958-19901958-1963Rosemead High SchoolCalifornia1958-1965Rosemead Swim ClubEvenings1963-1965Arcadia High School1965-1967Pasadena City Co...
Daily newspaper in Doha, Qatar The PeninsulaTypeDaily newspaperFormatBroadsheetOwner(s)Dar Al SharqFounder(s)Dar Al SharqEditor-in-chiefDr. Khalid bin Mubarak Al-ShafiFounded1996; 28 years ago (1996)LanguageEnglishHeadquartersDohaSister newspapersAl SharqWebsitethepeninsulaqatar.com The Peninsula is an English language daily newspaper published from Doha, Qatar.[1] Its main competitors are the Gulf Times and the Qatar Tribune.[2][3] History The Penins...
Senorbì Mater Mediterranea - IV millennio a.C. - Museo archeologico nazionale di Cagliari. La cultura di Ozieri (o di San Michele) fu una cultura prenuragica che si sviluppò in tutta la Sardegna durante un periodo di tempo che va dal 4000 a.C. al 3300 a.C. Il suo nome deriva dalla località in cui sono state rinvenute per la prima volta testimonianze importanti e precisamente in una grotta chiamata di San Michele, presso la cittadina di Ozieri nella Sardegna settentrionale. Gli scavi archeo...
Television studio complex in Los Angeles, California Television CityTelevision City Studios in Los AngelesLocation within Western Los AngelesAlternative namesCBS Television CityTelevision City StudiosGeneral informationTypeTelevision studiosLocationFairfax District, Los AngelesAddress7800 Beverly BoulevardLos Angeles, California90036Coordinates34°04′28″N 118°21′36″W / 34.074444°N 118.36°W / 34.074444; -118.36InauguratedNovember 16, 1952; 71 yea...
S-1 Igor Sikorsky and the S-1 near Kiev, Russian Empire in May 1910 Role PrototypeType of aircraft National origin Russian Empire Designer Igor Sikorsky First flight May 1910 Number built 1 Developed into Sikorsky S-2 The Sikorsky S-1 was the first fixed-wing aircraft design by Igor Sikorsky. In February 1910 work began on the pusher configured biplane powered by a 15 hp (11 kW) Anzani three-cylinder, air-cooled engine. The machine was completed in April and Sikorsky began his firs...
Country in Southeast Europe Kosova redirects here. For other uses, see Kosovo (disambiguation) and Kosova (disambiguation). Republic of KosovoRepublika e Kosovës (Albanian)Република Косово / Republika Kosovo (Serbian) Flag Emblem Anthem: Himni i Republikës së KosovësAnthem of the Republic of KosovoLocation of Kosovo (green)StatusRecognised as independent by 104 out of 193 member states of the United Nations.[1]Claimed by Serbia as the Autonomous Provi...
Cleveland CavaliersStagione 2000-2001Sport pallacanestro Squadra Cleveland Cavaliers AllenatoreRandy Wittman Vice-allenatoriMike Woodson, Bob Ociepka, Keith Smart NBA30-52 (.366)Division: 6º posto (Central)Conference: 11º posto (Eastern) Playoffnon qualificata StadioGund Arena 1999-2000 2001-2002 La stagione 2000-01 dei Cleveland Cavaliers fu la 31ª nella NBA per la franchigia. I Cleveland Cavaliers arrivarono sesti nella Central Division della Eastern Conference con un record di 30-5...
For other places with the same name, see Dąbrowa. Place in Silesian Voivodeship, PolandDąbrowa GórniczaFrom top, left to right: Palace of CultureBasilica of Saint Mary of the AngelsMain railway station FlagCoat of armsDąbrowa GórniczaCoordinates: 50°19′17″N 19°11′14″E / 50.32139°N 19.18722°E / 50.32139; 19.18722Country PolandVoivodeship SilesianCountycity countyCity rights1916Government • City mayorMarcin Bazylak (L)Area •&...