Das grosse Buch der Fabeln

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Mudrak, Edmund

Issue Date

1962

Volume

Issue

Type

Book, Whole

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

A wonderful book, a major resource, and a great bargain! The woodcuts (fifteen colored, mostly poorly) come from Steinhöwel's Äsopus (1477) and Das Buch der Weisheit (1483); their page numbers are on 248. Six chapters group the material well by age and place. I have taken detailed separate notes, particularly on the differences from well known versions. The medieval period seems to rely heavily on Aesopic stories but to develop and fill them out significantly. Among the best of the fables here are Die Hasen fangen und braten den Jäger (119), Der lügnerische Knecht mit dem großen Fuchs (129), and Undank ist der Welt Lohn (206). Almost all the fables here are prose or prose translations. The Nachwort (225) is helpful on the difference between fable and Volksmärchen but less helpful on the difference between fable and parable, several examples of which are included here. The basic viewpoint on fable is that the recognition that grows out of its story belongs to the essence of fable. For Mudrak, the fact that some fables come from age-old materials ready at hand militates against Lessing's famous description of the genesis of a fable. Chains within this book of like fables, of similar stories with different meanings, and of thematically related materials are described on 233-6. There are good helps at the end: Quellenverzeichnis, Sachverzeichnis, Inhalt.

Description

Citation

Publisher

Ensslin & Laiblin Verlag

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

1859 (Access ID)

Additional link

ISSN

EISSN

Collections