??LivetoXL said:well an allegory is a form of satire
and satires and allegories mock some topic
i recommend writing an allegorical story on
current affairs and news such as a parody
of the US government or middle eastern governance
George Orwell's Animal Farm is an allegory. In fact, probably the most famous satirical allegory.nerdsforever said:I suppose you want to use animals? on a farm?
Good picture book, too.jazzbaby said:The Rabbits
was an allegory
Note: The most famous satirical and political allegory. Perhaps I wasn't specific enough. I just wanted to pass the point that it is indeed well-known. I have never read Gulliver's Travels for example.Empyrean444 said:"George Orwell's Animal Farm is an allegory. In fact, probably the most famous satirical allegory."
Surely Gulliver's Travels is at least as famous?
Whilst an allegory can be satirical or a parody, it is not condition that it be either of these. Dante, in the Divine Comedy, uses allegory heavily, and not only in the aforementioned ways.
I would avoid animal allegory, as it is often overused. Try an allegory that uses ficitional places/peoples to embody real ones...like in Gullivers Travels. Use everday objects/occurences as allegorical figures(eg, the sun can=wisdom, etc). Relgious symbolism is also useful in this regard, as such "divine machinery" can enrich a story - George w and Hussein represented by two quarrelling demons, fighting over the lowest point in hell, so on and so forth.
Gulliver's Travels is so epic.bawd said:I have never read Gulliver's Travels for example.
so trueAplus said:Gulliver's Travels is so epic.
I read the storybook version as a child, never the text. Also watched a very decent film adaption. Never realised it was an allegory.Aplus said:Gulliver's Travels is so epic.