Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE

As a result of its association with marginalized groups, the genre of fable is sometimes presented as accurately reflecting the voice of the Other, although the fable has traditionally always been a vehicle for the elite to establish, explain and justify their positions. While the fable is increasin...

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Main Author: Jordan, Cara
Other Authors: Mason, Hugh
Language:en_ca
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43607
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-436072014-01-18T03:39:01ZVoicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CEJordan, CaraFableSlavery0294As a result of its association with marginalized groups, the genre of fable is sometimes presented as accurately reflecting the voice of the Other, although the fable has traditionally always been a vehicle for the elite to establish, explain and justify their positions. While the fable is increasingly associated with the Other from the 1st century CE, the genre is still appropriated by upper-class male authors as a means of defining their positions and constructing their own ideal political, social and literary worlds. This study will focus on the voicing of the Aesopic fable in the literature of the 1st-3rd centuries CE, primarily in authors and works that incorporate one clearly identifiable fable exemplum told at length in the text. Elite authors in this period used the fable as a means of communicating their views of behavioural expectations, not only by appropriating a genre that they have characterized as Other, but also by the voicing of fable through marginalized figures. This appropriation of the othered genre and voice allows for an exploration of boundaries that in the end will reaffirm the established order. The elite appropriation of fable as a means of social control over marginalized groups reflects an uneasiness about their own positions and the increasing social mobility beginning in the 1st century CE. This study of the appropriation of the othered genre will contribute to our understanding of how elite authors dealt with anxieties about potential and actual disruptions in their expectations of the socio-political reality.Mason, Hugh2013-112014-01-10T15:32:20ZNO_RESTRICTION2014-01-10T15:32:20Z2014-01-10Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/43607en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Fable
Slavery
0294
spellingShingle Fable
Slavery
0294
Jordan, Cara
Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
description As a result of its association with marginalized groups, the genre of fable is sometimes presented as accurately reflecting the voice of the Other, although the fable has traditionally always been a vehicle for the elite to establish, explain and justify their positions. While the fable is increasingly associated with the Other from the 1st century CE, the genre is still appropriated by upper-class male authors as a means of defining their positions and constructing their own ideal political, social and literary worlds. This study will focus on the voicing of the Aesopic fable in the literature of the 1st-3rd centuries CE, primarily in authors and works that incorporate one clearly identifiable fable exemplum told at length in the text. Elite authors in this period used the fable as a means of communicating their views of behavioural expectations, not only by appropriating a genre that they have characterized as Other, but also by the voicing of fable through marginalized figures. This appropriation of the othered genre and voice allows for an exploration of boundaries that in the end will reaffirm the established order. The elite appropriation of fable as a means of social control over marginalized groups reflects an uneasiness about their own positions and the increasing social mobility beginning in the 1st century CE. This study of the appropriation of the othered genre will contribute to our understanding of how elite authors dealt with anxieties about potential and actual disruptions in their expectations of the socio-political reality.
author2 Mason, Hugh
author_facet Mason, Hugh
Jordan, Cara
author Jordan, Cara
author_sort Jordan, Cara
title Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
title_short Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
title_full Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
title_fullStr Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
title_full_unstemmed Voicing Power through the Other: Elite Appropriations of Fable in the 1st-3rd Centuries CE
title_sort voicing power through the other: elite appropriations of fable in the 1st-3rd centuries ce
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43607
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