My educational experience lightly touched
the topic of fables. Before reading, Aesop’s
Fables, I assumed the morals were going to be obvious. After reading the
fourteen mini-stories I realized the relevance these stories had to real life
experiences. Morals have the possibility of having multiple significances.
The fable that caught my attention
the most is, The Wolf in Sheep’s
clothing. While reading this mini-story I understood the origin of this
lesson because of my older brother. Several years ago my brother got the image,
a wolf in sheep’s skin, tattooed on his arm. It was done for a cheap price, so
it resulted in looking like I drew it for him. After laughing at him, he
proceeded in telling me the reason behind wanting to get the tattoo. The moral
behind the fable is, looks can be deceiving. In other words, don’t judge a book
by its cover. In my opinion, this is an international lesson because any
individual can create assumptions about others.
The second reading, Aesop, Aristotle, and Animals: The Role of
Fables in Human Life, by Edward Clayton, was completely different than the
previous reading. This article was longer, contained footnotes, a bibliography,
and focused on the origin of fables. A question I have about this article is
are fables still used to argue about politics? “Aristotle... rhetorical
strategy in politics.” (Clayton, 186). According to Clayton, Greek philosopher
Aristotle used fables as a strategy for relevance to real life experiences. As
stated before, I am not very familiar with fables therefore I am not sure if
this is the structure for writing a fable. Another question I have is do the
animals in fables always represent the poor and/or weak?
Estefhany, this was very interesting to read, I especially enjoyed the story about your brother, and you included the moral, which in fact can be applied to our daily lives.
ReplyDeleteAwesome Work! I liked that you included a personal story of a family member which also had a moral to it.
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