Civility and morality in civilization represented in The Jungle Book and showing how danger threatens society.

Date Submitted: 10/17/2004 11:33:28
Category: / Literature / European Literature
Length: 8 pages (2161 words)
When reading Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book, one could look at the Jungle as a "city" and the animals as its inhabitants, its civilization. A civilization is "the type of culture and society developed by a particular nation or region or in a particular era" (American Heritage 246). Each animal in The Jungle Book represents a different part of the "city." In a city, there are the lazy people, the hard workers, the thieves, the cheaters, …
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…awrence, and Joyce Cary, New York: Random House. 1971, pp. 37-45. Rpt. in Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. Ed Dennis Poupard. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1987. McClure, John A. Kipling and Conrad, The Colonial Fiction, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1981, pp 143. Rpt. in Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. Ed Dennis Poupard. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1987. Wislon, Angus. Rudyard Kipling, Twayne Publishers, 1972, pp. 56-57. Rpt. in Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. Ed Dennis Poupard. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1987.
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