Difference between revisions of "The Wolf & the Lamb"
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|<div style="text-align: center;">'''{{PAGENAME}}'''</div>]] | |<div style="text-align: center;">'''{{PAGENAME}}'''</div>]] | ||
===Dramatic Cycles=== | ===Dramatic Cycles=== | ||
+ | * ((eatLamb,hunger,wolf,animals),(eatLamb,lambDead,lamb,animals)) | ||
+ | Eating the lamb is good for the wolf but bad for the lamb. | ||
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===Comments=== | ===Comments=== | ||
[[Category:Fables]] | [[Category:Fables]] | ||
+ | The story works not by the cycle itself, a mere interpersonal conflict, but by the transition from a situation where the wolf feels the need to find an excuse to a situation where this need does not exist anymore. See also [[The Fox & the Grapes]]. |
Latest revision as of 11:39, 27 April 2016
Aesop's Fables - 11. The Wolf & the Lamb
- The Aesop's fables dramatic structures -
This page is part of a computational narratology project
Contents
Text
Structure
Dramatic Cycles
- ((eatLamb,hunger,wolf,animals),(eatLamb,lambDead,lamb,animals))
Eating the lamb is good for the wolf but bad for the lamb.
Comments
The story works not by the cycle itself, a mere interpersonal conflict, but by the transition from a situation where the wolf feels the need to find an excuse to a situation where this need does not exist anymore. See also The Fox & the Grapes.