Bestia
Yearbook of the Beast Fable Society
[Bestia, 2] 1990. ca. 125 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© Beast Fable Society
Table of Contents
The form and spirit of beast fable | 4–18 |
Approaches to the beast fable in the liberal arts curriculum | 19–29 |
Teaching Animals | 30–40 |
Thirteen ways of looking at two black birds: A critical fiction based on “The Twa Corbies” | 41–48 |
Who “Goophered” whom: The Afro-American Fabulist and his Tale in Charles Chestnutt’s The Conjure Woman | 49–62 |
La Fontaine’s “The Frogs who asked for a King” Reptiles and revolutions in French fable illustration and caricature | 63–80 |
Ivan Krylov and The Aesopian style of narrative | 81–86 |
“A whirlpool of change” Isak Dinesen’s “The Monkey” as a beast fable | 87–100 |
The doffing of skins | 101–108 |
George orwell’s Animal Farm: A twentieth-century beast fable | 109–118 |
Smoky the Cowhorse: The beast fable goes west | 119–124 |