Fable
Fable is a literary genre: 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, 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.
Usage has not always been so clearly distinguished. In the King James Version of the New Testament, "μῦθος" was rendered by the translators as "fable" in the First Epistle to Timothy, the Second Epistle to Timothy, the Epistle to Titus and the First Epistle of Peter.
A person who writes fables is a fabulist.
History
The fable is one of the most enduring forms of folk literature, spread abroad, modern researchers agree, 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 legendary Aesop, 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" and Belos. Epicharmus of Kos and Phormis are reported as having been among the first to invent comic fables. Many familiar fables of Aesop include "The Crow and the Pitcher", "The Tortoise and the Hare" and "The Lion and the Mouse". 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.Africa
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. Grandparents enjoy enormous respect in African societies and fill the new role of story-telling during retirement years. Children and, to some extent, adults are mesmerized by good story-tellers when they become animated in their quest to tell a good fable.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.
India
India has a rich tradition of fabulous novels, mostly explainable by the fact that the culture derives traditions and learns qualities from natural elements. Some of the gods are forms of animals with ideal qualities. Also, hundreds of fables were composed in ancient India during the first millennium BCE, often as stories within frame stories. Indian fables have a mixed cast of humans and animals. The dialogues are often longer than in fables of Aesop and often witty as the animals try to outwit one another by trickery and deceit. In Indian fables, man is not superior to the animals. The tales are often comical. The Indian fable adhered to the universally known traditions of the fable. The best 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 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. Earlier Indian epics such as Vyasa's Mahabharata 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.Indian fables with morals
A case of spiritualist India, Indian Fables Stories Panchatantra are the most seasoned enduring accounts of humankind, getting by for a considerable length of time, from mouth to mouth, before they were recorded. You will cherish the clear pace of the tales, and they generally make for extraordinary sleep time or narrating meetings. Offer them will all story darlings, and let them appreciate the light, captivating existence of the narratives.The Panchatantra is an antiquated Indian assortment of between related creature tales in Sanskrit section and composition. The soonest recorded work, ascribed to Vishnu Sharma, dates to around 300 BCE. The tales are likely a lot more established, having been passed down ages orally.The word “Panchatantra” is a blend of the words Pancha – which means five in Sanskrit, and Tantra – which means weave. Truly interpreted, it implies interlacing five skeins of customs and lessons into a book.
They are really archived forms of oral stories that stumbled into ages previously. Indeed, even today, they are supported stories across India and different pieces of the world. We are pleased to present to you an assortment of the most well known Panchatantra stories to you, for they are cherished by grown-ups and kids the same.
They give the children an early balance onto good and social qualities, forming the youthful personalities into a moral future. The vast majority of the accounts accompany recordings after the content, to give you an overall encounter. Appreciate them, with your children, and offer them with everybody, and help manufacture an increasingly wonderful world.
These Indian Panchatantra stories are converted into straightforward English, and consequently they fill in as extraordinary material for short Indian stories for youngsters. Antiquated tales, still pertinent for the present howdy tech way of life
Europe
Fables had a further long tradition through the Middle Ages, and became part of European high literature. During the 17th century, the French fabulist Jean de La Fontaine saw the soul of the fable in the moral — a rule of behavior. Starting with the Aesopian pattern, La Fontaine set out to satirize the court, the church, the rising bourgeoisie, indeed the entire human scene of his time. La Fontaine's model was subsequently emulated by England's John Gay ; Poland's Ignacy Krasicki ; Italy's Lorenzo Pignotti and Giovanni Gherardo de Rossi ; Serbia's Dositej Obradović ; Spain's Félix María de Samaniego and Tomás de Iriarte y Oropesa ; France's Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian ; and Russia's Ivan Krylov.Modern era
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 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 and Further Fables for Our Time, and in his stories "The Princess and the Tin Box" in The Beast in Me and Other Animals and "The Last Clock: A Fable for the Time, Such As It Is, of Man" in Lanterns and Lances. Władysław Reymont's The Revolt, a metaphor for the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, described a revolt by animals that take over their farm in order to introduce "equality." George Orwell's Animal Farm 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 '' published in 2003, they have collected myths, legends, 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.
Fabulists
Classic
- Aesop, author/s of Aesop's Fables
- Vishnu Sarma, author of the anthropomorphic political treatise and fable collection, the Panchatantra
- Bidpai, author of Sanskrit and Pali animal fables in verse and prose, sometimes derived from Jataka tales
- Syntipas, Indian philosopher, reputed author of a collection of tales known in Europe as The Story of the Seven Wise Masters
- Gaius Julius Hyginus, author of Fabulae
- Phaedrus, Roman fabulist, by birth a Macedonian
- Nizami Ganjavi
- Walter of England, Anglo-Norman poet, published Aesop's Fables in distichs c. 1175
- Marie de France
- Jalāl ad-Dīn Muhammad Balkhī
- Vardan Aygektsi, Armenian priest and fabulist
- Berechiah ha-Nakdan, author of Jewish fables adapted from Aesop's Fables
- Robert Henryson, author of The Morall Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian
- Leonardo da Vinci
- Biernat of Lublin
- Jean de La Fontaine
- Sulkhan-Saba Orbeliani, author of "A Book of Wisdom and Lies"
- Bernard de Mandeville, author of The Fable of the Bees
- John Gay
- Christian Fürchtegott Gellert
- Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
- Ignacy Krasicki, author of Fables and Parables and New Fables
- Dositej Obradović
- Félix María de Samaniego, best known for "The Ant and the Cicade"
- Tomás de Iriarte
- Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian,, author of Fables
- Ivan Krylov
- Hans Christian Andersen
Modern
- Leo Tolstoy
- Rafael Pombo, Colombian fabulist, poet, writer
- Ambrose Bierce
- Joel Chandler Harris
- Sholem Aleichem
- George Ade, Fables in Slang, etc.
- Władysław Reymont
- Felix Salten
- Don Marquis, author of the fables of archy and mehitabel
- Franz Kafka
- Damon Runyon
- James Thurber, Fables for Our Time and Further Fables for Our Time
- George Orwell
- Dr. Seuss
- Isaac Bashevis Singer
- Nankichi Niimi, Japanese author and poet
- Pierre Gamarra
- Richard Adams , author of Watership Down
- José Saramago
- Italo Calvino, Cosmicomics etc.
- Arnold Lobel, author of Fables, winner 1981 Caldecott Medal
- Ramsay Wood, author of Kalila and Dimna: Fables of Friendship and Betrayal
- Bill Willingham, author of Fables graphic novels
- David Sedaris, author of Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk
- Randall Kenan
- Guillermo del Toro, Mexican filmmaker
- Pendleton Ward, American animator, creator of Adventure Time
Notable fable collections
- Aesop's Fables by Aesop
- Jataka tales
- Panchatantra by Vishnu Sarma
- Baital Pachisi
- Hitopadesha
- A Book of Wisdom and Lies by Sulkhan-Saba Orbeliani
- Seven Wise Masters by Syntipas
- One Thousand and One Nights
- Fables by Jean de La Fontaine
- Fables and Parables by Ignacy Krasicki
- Fairy Tales by Hans Christian Andersen
- by Joel Chandler Harris
- Fantastic Fables by Ambrose Bierce
- Fables for Our Time by James Thurber
- 99 Fables by William March
- Collected Fables by Ambrose Bierce, edited by S. T. Joshi
- Kalila and Dimna, Vol 1: Fables of Friendship and Betrayal by Ramsay Wood
- Kalila and Dimna, Vol 2: Fables of Conflict and Intrigue by Ramsay Wood