When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Insects in literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insects_in_literature

    Insects have equally been used for their strangeness and alien qualities, with giant wasps and intelligent ants threatening human society in science fiction stories. Locusts have represented greed, and more literally plague and destruction, while the fly has been used to indicate death and decay, and the grasshopper has indicated improvidence.

  3. Representation of animals in Western medieval art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representation_of_animals...

    The art of the Middle Ages was mainly religious, reflecting the relationship between God and man, created in His image. The animal often appears confronted or dominated by man, but a second current of thought stemming from Saint Paul and Aristotle, which developed from the 12th century onwards, includes animals and humans in the same community of living creatures.

  4. Cultural depictions of spotted hyenas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of...

    After the release of The Lion King, hyena biologists protested against the animal's portrayal: one hyena researcher sued Disney studios for defamation of character, [12] and another – who had organized the animators' visit to the University of California's Field Station for Behavioural Research, where they would observe and sketch captive ...

  5. Three poisons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_poisons

    These three states are delusion, also known as ignorance; greed or sensual attachment; and hatred or aversion. [1] [2] These three poisons are considered to be three afflictions or character flaws that are innate in beings and the root of craving, and so causing suffering and rebirth. [1] [3]

  6. McTeague - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McTeague

    McTeague: A Story of San Francisco, otherwise known as simply McTeague, is a novel by Frank Norris, first published in 1899. It tells the story of a couple's courtship and marriage, and their subsequent descent into poverty and violence as the result of jealousy and greed .

  7. Shita-kiri Suzume - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shita-kiri_Suzume

    Shita-kiri Suzume (舌切り雀, shita-kiri suzume), translated literally into "Tongue-Cut Sparrow", is a traditional Japanese fable telling of a kind old man, his avaricious wife and an injured sparrow.

  8. Horse symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_symbolism

    The Horses of Neptune, illustration by Walter Crane, 1893.. Horse symbolism is the study of the representation of the horse in mythology, religion, folklore, art, literature and psychoanalysis as a symbol, in its capacity to designate, to signify an abstract concept, beyond the physical reality of the quadruped animal.

  9. Greed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greed

    Greed is also personified by the fox in early allegoric literature of many lands. [17] [18] Greed (as a cultural quality) was often imputed as a racial pejorative by the ancient Greeks and Romans; as such it was used against Egyptians, Punics, or other Oriental peoples; [19] and generally to any enemies or people whose customs were considered ...