Erik Zillén
List of John Benjamins publications in which Erik Zillén is involved.
2024 La fable naturaliste: Réflexions sur une œuvre d’August Strindberg Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society, Trachsler, Richard and Baudouin Van den Abeele (eds.), pp. 215–225 | Article
L’article examine les dix fables en prose que l’auteur suédois August Strindberg a écrites en français pendant les années 1880. L’analyse se concentrera sur trois aspects de ces textes: le contexte de leur création et publication, leur statut générique et la vision qu’ils véhiculent sur la… read more
2021 Death of a genre? The Aesopic fable and the emergence of modernity Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society, Trachsler, Richard and Baudouin Van den Abeele (eds.), pp. 151–167 | Article
Taking as its starting point the scholarly discussion about the possible death of the Aesopic fable towards the end of the eighteenth century, this article proposes a broadening of perspective, arguing for a thorough examination of the impact of modernity on some of the basic contexts and… read more
2019 The dancing bear from Spain: On the eighteenth-century Swedish reception of Tomás de Iriarte’s Fábulas literarias (1782) Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society, Trachsler, Richard and Baudouin Van den Abeele (eds.), pp. 252–268 | Article
The article depicts the intense and at times unpredictable fable transfer in eighteenth-century Europe by tracing the source text of one of the most acclaimed works in Swedish fable history, Anna Maria Lenngren’s “Björndansen” [The dance of the bear]. This verse fable, published in Stockholms… read more
2009 Fable and Lutheranization in 16th and early 17th century Sweden Reinardus: Yearbook of the International Reynard Society, Abeele, Baudouin Van den and Paul Wackers (eds.), pp. 201–217 | Article
This paper argues that the Reformation and the adoption of Lutheranism as a state religion had a great and lasting impact on the history of the Aesopic fable in Sweden. During the 16th and early 17th century, it is shown, the genre was explicitly Lutheranized and ascribed vital functions in the… read more



