UNDERSTANDING THE OGRE

AS LYCOMORPH
 

Cover Design by Éctor Sandoval ©

 

 

By

AARON J. KOEHNEMANN

(University of Missouri-Columbia, USA)

 

ISBN: 978-1-937030-31-5

 2013

 

This work introduces, defines and applies to French literary analysis a term of my own invention: lycomorphism. This is a literary phenomenon by which an essentially human figure is characterized as wolfish via the application of lupine characteristics. In order to demonstrate this concept, this work analyzes in depth the ogre figure in seventeenth century French literature. In order to contextualize the ogre as a lycomorph, this work first scours the French literary canon along with historical Witchcraft Trial documentations in order to convey the portrayal of wolves from the Middle Ages to the seventeenth century. After recording the predominant lupine characteristics, this work then examines the ogre’s portrayals in French literature of the seventeenth century to see which of these established lupine traits are shared by the ogres. Additionally, this work compares and contrasts the French ogre with his/her temporal and geographical predecessors, examining the ogre’s origins and evolutions to its debut in the French canon in 1697.

By demonstrating the ogre’s lycomorphism, this work demonstrates that the ogre offers a manifestation of the French seventeenth century shift in attitudes regarding man’s primary adversary. Whereas the wolf was the prevalent literary antagonist of man from the medieval period to the mid-seventeenth century, in the late seventeenth century fairy tales, the primary threat to man comes from a bestial hybrid of man and beast: an ogre. This shift in the depiction of literary adversaries corresponds to historical factors of the day, including the rise of Jansenism, and a growing body of female authors who tend to use ogres rather than strictly human or lupine villains as the principal threat to man in their literary accounts. Additionally in their works, the ogre, by virtue of his resemblance to both wolf and man, is exploited to allegorize social, rather than moral issues, the traditional function of the big, bad wolf.

 

Dr. Aaron Koehnemann earned his B.A. in French from Truman State University, his M.A. in French from St. Louis University and his Ph.D. from the University of Missouri-Columbia. His primary research interests include the fantastic or supernatural, folklore, and mythology present in French literature from the Medieval to the Early Modern Eras.

 

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