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Stereotypes of animals

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Stereotypes of animals show that certain animals are commonly represented with particular traits. When anthropomorphising a (non human) animal there are several stereotypes associated with some species that are frequently repeated. Sometimes this is an exaggeration of a real aspect of the creature, while other times it is taken from myth with the true origin forgotten. Such stereotypes are present in real life but are most commonly found in film and television.

Some stereotypes are popularised by one appearance in media. For example, Disney's 1942 film Bambi portrayed the titular deer as an innocent, fragile animal.<ref>Eaton, Marcia. "Fact and Fiction in Aes App of Nature". Accessed 17 September 2006.</ref>

While some authors make use of these animal stereotypes others develop the character in the totally opposite direction.

Many modern stereotypes of animals have a long tradition dating back to Aesop's Fables, which drew upon sources that included Ancient Egyptian animal tales. Aesop's stereotypes were so deeply ingrained by the time of Apollonius of Tyana that they were accepted for animals' "true" nature:

   
Stereotypes of animals
And there is another charm about him, namely, that he puts animals in a pleasing light and makes them interesting to mankind. For after being brought up from childhood with these stories, and after being as it were nursed by them from babyhood, we acquire certain opinions of the several animals and think of some of them as royal animals, of others as silly, of others as witty, and others as innocent.
   
Stereotypes of animals

Flavius Philostratus, The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, 5.14.

[edit] Common modern (primarily Western) stereotypes

Image:Northern Spotted Owl.USFWS-thumb.jpg

"Do ostriches really bury their heads in the sand?". Accessed 15 September 2006.</ref>

"Mice and Elephants". Accessed 20 November 2006.</ref>

  • The quiet mouse
    • Mice are frequently portrayed in animation as shy and physically-frail, often bookish, nerdy and/or glasses-wearing.
  • The formal penguin
  • The curious / playful otter
    • From anyone who has ever watched one at an aquarium.
  • The horny rabbit - Following naturally from the phrase "(to) breed like rabbits".
  • The patient turtle / tortoise (No distinctions are generally made between the two.)
  • The hyperactive / fast-running rabbit / hare (Again, generally not distinguished from each other.)
  • The fast-running cheetah is another animal noted for its speed
  • The diligent ant and the lazy / carefree grasshopper
    • Both of these stem mainly from another fable The Ant and the Grasshopper in which the former works hard to prepare for the winter while the latter wastes the summer and fall having fun, only to have to beg food from the ant or starve. For this reason, grasshoppers are also sometimes characterized as social parasites (as in the Pixar movie A Bug's Life).
  • The comical / always-laughing hyena
    • From the uncanny resemblance its call bears to a human laugh.
  • The wanton and vicious wasp
    • Wasps are often portrayed as deliberate stingers of humans.
  • The wiktionary:dopey (or "bumbling") bumblebee
  • The evil snake
  • The greedy and/or filthy pig
    • Both aspects are due to the natural pig lifestyle (when raised on a farm rather than a feedlot)—"greedy" from the way they devour any food put in front of them, "filthy" from the fact that a pig-sty is generally a soup of mud and feces which the pigs don't seem to mind at all (this also gives rise to the saying "Happy as a pig in shit.")
    • The stereotype may also derive in part from Judeo-Islamic cultures, whose concepts of kosher/halal teach that pigs are "unclean" for various reasons.
  • The criminal raccoon
    • From the bandit-like black "mask" over its eyes. Also known for being notorious scavengers.

[edit] Common modern Eastern Stereotypes

[edit] References

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