Reading Notes: Aesop's Fables (Jacobs) Part A
This section of fables organized the stories by the type of animal that was highlighted by each story. This was helpful because, in general, types of animals keep the same general traits across stories, so it is east to understand themes across stories.
By placing multiple stories featuring the same characters back to back, there was also an opportunity for contrasting certain aspects for them. This includes putting them on opposite sides of the story, first antagonist then protagonist or vice versa, or having them succeed in the story or fail in the end. I like this strategy of providing twists and will try to use it in my own writing. A visual version of one of the fables.
Bibliography: The Fables of Aesop
By placing multiple stories featuring the same characters back to back, there was also an opportunity for contrasting certain aspects for them. This includes putting them on opposite sides of the story, first antagonist then protagonist or vice versa, or having them succeed in the story or fail in the end. I like this strategy of providing twists and will try to use it in my own writing. A visual version of one of the fables.
A visual version of one of the fables.
Bibliography: The Fables of Aesop
Comments
Post a Comment