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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page overview of the speculated origin of those tales collectively known as Aesop’s fables.  Presents the current body of knowledge regarding Aesop’s identity and occupation and evaluates the various meanings typically attributed to his stories.  The author of this paper emphasizes that the authorship of these great fables can undoubtedly be contended to relate both to the circumstances of the presumed author’s life and to the larger historical and political setting of the time but the stories could have also been created simply for entertainment purposes.  Bibliography lists 11 sources.
                                                
Page Count: 
                                                9 pages (~225 words per page)
                                            
 
                                            
                                                File: AM2_PPaesop.rtf
                                            
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
                                                    
                                                
                                                    Aesops fables has captivated the minds and imaginations of young and old alike for centuries.  Written in approximately the sixth or seventh century B.C., this collection of tales have  
                                                
                                                    been labeled as fables.  Fables are didactic, i.e. they are meant to teach a lesson.  Aesops fables most often involve animals but these animals are to some degree  
                                                
                                                    impersonal in that they are never named.  They are, however, able to speak to man:  
                                                
                                                    "animals had the same ph?n? power of speech as men... men and gods were one community ...In other words, there had been in the Golden Age a communion of  
                                                
                                                    animals and men and of men and gods. In the fables of Aesop, we find animals actually communicating with men as well as one another through the power of speech"  
                                                
                                                    (Nagy, 2002, PG).                  Each animal, it seems simultaneously impersonates their species while at  
                                                
                                                    the same time having extraordinary characteristics and experiences.  The reasons behind the authorship of these great fables can undoubtedly be contended to relate both to the circumstances of the  
                                                
                                                    presumed authors life and to the larger historical and political setting of the time but the stories could have also been created simply for entertainment purposes.  
                                                
                                                    The true author of the tales is  really unknown.  The literary community speculates, however, that these tales can be credited to Aesop, a man who  
                                                
                                                    is believed to have been a barbarian slave.  A contemporary explanation of Aesops life claims that while he was a slave, however, he was detailed as a confidential clerk  
                                                
                                                    ...