Bestia
Yearbook of the Beast Fable Society
[Bestia, 3] 1991. ca. 125 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© Beast Fable Society
Table of Contents
Animal Fable and Fabulous Animal: The evolution of the species with specific reference to the Foxy Kind | 5–14 |
Shape-shifting women in the Old Irish Sagas | 15–21 |
Beast fables in Sanskrit | 22–29 |
Galiani’s Beast Fable in Diderot’s Letters to Sophie Volland | 30–37 |
The Beast of syntax: Keats’s “Lamia” and narrative time | 38–47 |
The rebirth of Indian and Chinese Mythology in Gerald Vizenor's Griever: An American Monkey King in China | 48–55 |
Myth, fable, and art in Yeats’s “Leda and the Swan” | 56–67 |
Renart through the looking glass: The passage of the Fox from one fictitious world to another in the Roman de Renart | 68–73 |
Finding one to worship, finding one to betray: The language of fable in Thurber, Orwell, and Pynchon | 74–86 |
The stag hunt in The Merry Wives of Windsor | 87–101 |
Secondary beasts in Moby-Dick | 102–107 |
Bernard shaw as beast fabulist | 108–114 |
Beast allegory in the Late Medieval Sermon in Strasbourg: The example of John Geiler's von den vier Letvengeschrei (1507) | 115–124 |