Mauricio Giles

  • Agility of self-worth, fantasies of destruction, disappearance and annihilation, inquiries about origins and ambitions, preoccupations with bodily appearances and experiences, along with the “Idea of marginalization” (Hunt, 1995, p. 130): “Books about shrinking (. . .) retain their fascination; they pose concerns which matter to kid and adult…[Read more]

  • Antuan, it is hoped that a concomitant awareness of each fiction and study could help scientists and architects alike shrinking that gap to Lilliputian dimensions.Frontiers in rstb.2013.0181 Psychology | http://www.frontiersin.orgApril 2016 | Volume 7 | ArticleDieguezThe Gulliver ThemeTHE “GULLIVER THEME” IN LITERATURE The Gulliver ThemeFiction has long…[Read more]

  • 0 m just before he’s “forced to swim,” either producing the sea a Lilliputian a single, or Gulliver himself de facto a giant inside a normal-sized sea. Brobdingnag’s sea seems diverse, as “Sea-fish rstb.2013.0181 are from the same Size with these in Europe, and consequently not worth catching” for the giant men and women. However, “a Hailstone is…[Read more]

  • Agility of self-worth, fantasies of destruction, disappearance and annihilation, concerns about origins and targets, preoccupations with bodily appearances and experiences, along with the “Idea of marginalization” (Hunt, 1995, p. 130): “Books about shrinking (. . .) retain their fascination; they pose inquiries which matter to kid and adult alike.…[Read more]

  • Agility of self-worth, fantasies of destruction, disappearance and annihilation, concerns about origins and ambitions, preoccupations with bodily appearances and experiences, and the “Idea of marginalization” (Hunt, 1995, p. 130): “Books about shrinking (. . .) retain their fascination; they pose questions which matter to youngster and adult…[Read more]

  • In her study of the “miniature hero metaphor” in children’s literature, Hunt (1995) highlights “three versions of the miniature,” namely the “solitary dwarf,” the “miniature society,” and the “shrinking character.” E. B. White’s (1945) Stuart Little embodies the solitary dwarf motif. A two inches tall child-mouse, lost in New York City could…[Read more]

  • B. White’s (1945) Stuart Little embodies the solitary dwarf motif. A two inches tall child-mouse, lost in New York City could predictably embody the feelings of helplessness, insecurity, insignificance and neglect seasoned by children in the adult planet. Little equals unimportant. But the protagonist is intelligent, courageous, and resourceful.…[Read more]

  • Higher.” Twelve occurrences of such changes happen throughout the story, either following consumption of some item or spontaneously, most generally at handy moments when there’s a need to have for any transform of scale to pursue the adventure, and in some cases supplying alternative options: “if it makes me grow bigger, I can attain the key;…[Read more]

  • Even so, “a Hailstone is near eighteen hundred times as substantial as a single in Europe.” Why such discrepancy? Gulliver merely “leave[s] the Motives to become determined by Philosophers.” Seeing gigantic eagles from Brobdingnag fly away within the distance, normal-sized human sailors remark “nothing of their getting larger than the usual Size,”…[Read more]

  • 0 m prior to he is “forced to swim,” either making the sea a Lilliputian 1, or Gulliver himself de facto a giant inside a normal-sized sea. Brobdingnag’s sea appears diverse, as “Sea-fish rstb.2013.0181 are of the exact same Size with those in Europe, and consequently not worth catching” for the giant individuals. Nonetheless, “a Hailstone is…[Read more]