Do Animals Have a Homeland?

The article aims to answer the following questions: How did the ancient Greeks associate animals with space, geography and their own settlements? Did they attribute nationality and territory to animals? Did they think animals missed their homelands? Could a foreign animal — according to the Greeks...

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Main Author: Lucyna Kostuch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Humanimalia 2017-09-01
Series:Humanimalia
Online Access:https://humanimalia.org/article/view/9614
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author Lucyna Kostuch
author_facet Lucyna Kostuch
author_sort Lucyna Kostuch
collection DOAJ
description The article aims to answer the following questions: How did the ancient Greeks associate animals with space, geography and their own settlements? Did they attribute nationality and territory to animals? Did they think animals missed their homelands? Could a foreign animal — according to the Greeks — experience a process of cultural integration, namely Hellenization? The Greeks attributed regional identity to animals, defined by the local geography and by the history of a region enclosed by borders. At the same time, the world of animals seemed to be ethnically diversified, for the Hellenes coined the terms: “Hellenic animal” — belonging to the Greek culture; and “barbaric animal” — belonging to a foreign culture. According to the ancient Greeks, each animal had its homeland and customs, and could feel at home in some place on the globe. Additionally, there are some examples of non-native animals who experienced the process of “Hellenization.”
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spelling doaj.art-b5f526cc2bef4afaa2e63720a3a769bd2023-10-18T08:39:55ZengHumanimaliaHumanimalia2151-86452017-09-019110.52537/humanimalia.9614Do Animals Have a Homeland?Lucyna Kostuch0Jan Kochanowski University The article aims to answer the following questions: How did the ancient Greeks associate animals with space, geography and their own settlements? Did they attribute nationality and territory to animals? Did they think animals missed their homelands? Could a foreign animal — according to the Greeks — experience a process of cultural integration, namely Hellenization? The Greeks attributed regional identity to animals, defined by the local geography and by the history of a region enclosed by borders. At the same time, the world of animals seemed to be ethnically diversified, for the Hellenes coined the terms: “Hellenic animal” — belonging to the Greek culture; and “barbaric animal” — belonging to a foreign culture. According to the ancient Greeks, each animal had its homeland and customs, and could feel at home in some place on the globe. Additionally, there are some examples of non-native animals who experienced the process of “Hellenization.” https://humanimalia.org/article/view/9614
spellingShingle Lucyna Kostuch
Do Animals Have a Homeland?
Humanimalia
title Do Animals Have a Homeland?
title_full Do Animals Have a Homeland?
title_fullStr Do Animals Have a Homeland?
title_full_unstemmed Do Animals Have a Homeland?
title_short Do Animals Have a Homeland?
title_sort do animals have a homeland
url https://humanimalia.org/article/view/9614
work_keys_str_mv AT lucynakostuch doanimalshaveahomeland