Difference between revisions of "The Wolf & the Lamb"

From IDSwiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Comments)
(Dramatic Cycles)
 
Line 7: Line 7:
 
   |<div style="text-align: center;">'''{{PAGENAME}}'''</div>]]
 
   |<div style="text-align: center;">'''{{PAGENAME}}'''</div>]]
 
===Dramatic Cycles===
 
===Dramatic Cycles===
* ((eatLamb,hunger,wolf,animals),(eaatLamb,lamDead,lamb,animals))
+
* ((eatLamb,hunger,wolf,animals),(eatLamb,lambDead,lamb,animals))
 
Eating the lamb is good for the wolf but bad for the lamb.
 
Eating the lamb is good for the wolf but bad for the lamb.
  

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

Text

Text available here

Structure

The Wolf & the Lamb

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.