Japanese fables come from internal influences and other influences. Please remember things as a child and read the story with your parents. Some of the story you encounter is very likely to be a good opportunity. For those who do not know what the allegory is, this is a story replacing humans with animals. When studying the story of Japan, I did not think it was difficult to find a rich fable. I found that animals play an important role in Japanese culture when tying the fables to Japanese life.
I'm human. When connecting the allegory to Japanese culture, I found that animals play an important role in Japanese culture. As with most cultures, the story plays an important role. Therefore, by using common sense, anyone can think exactly as thinking that there are many fables in Japanese culture. Therefore, animals are strongly related to Japanese culture and its many influences, so it is used in the Japanese story. If you want to ask one of the fable of American culture, many people can come up with a story
According to American literary researcher Donald Pesele, the last charm of this story is that it is a combination of fables, allegories and fables. The story incorporates the elements of the ancient animal fable, such as the fable of Aesop, where animals speak the truth, traditional beasts and fables. London is under the influence of "Book of the Jungle" of Rudyard Kipling written several years ago. This is a combination of fables and animal fables with the stories of other animals prevalent in the early 20 th century. In wild wild, London reinforces and adds to the lack of meaning of these stories.
Animal farms belong to a completely different tradition. It belongs to a series of moral animal fables dating back to Aesop and was given the most powerful form of the 20th century in the jungle of Kipling. People can call it animal fables based on social and political ideas targeting adults and children. Kipling - the main representative of British imperialism - is a writer with lifelong relationship with Orwell. However, for animal farms, Jonathan Swift is closer. At the age of 8, the young Eric Blair (the name when he was born, 'George Orwell' is his false name) won Gulliver's Travels as his birthday present. He found the book the night before, read it in his bedroom and put it on the lid. It spent the rest of his life with him.