Tarzan
:Tarzan is also the name of a Russian 4-wheel drive vehicle manufactured by AutoVAZ.
The Tarzan story
Tarzan is the orphaned son of aristocratic English parents marooned in Africa in the late 19th century. Upon their deaths, he is adopted and raised by a band of apes which Burroughs calls "mangani," a species not otherwise known to science, but with characteristics of gorillas, chimpanzees, and early hominids, including a primitive form of speech. "Tarzan" is "White Skin" in the mangani language. His "real" English name is John Clayton III, Lord Greystoke.
Related Topics:
Aristocratic - Africa - 19th century - Ape - Gorillas - Chimpanzees - Hominids - Greystoke
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Tarzan's upbringing gives him physical skills considerably superior to those of the finest "civilized" athletes, but he also inherits a high level of mental prowess. He teaches himself to read by examining basic English primers left by his parents, and unlike the inarticulate barbarian version of him later popularized in films, eventually learns to speak several languages fluently.
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Tarzan only makes contact with humans again when fully grown. At this stage, he learns to speak French and English and visits the civilized world, but then rejects this and returns to the jungle.
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Later stories recount many further adventures, often featuring the discovery of lost civilizations.
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Tarzan is a modern incarnation of the ancient literary tradition of "the hero raised by animals" (Feral children). Other examples are Mowgli from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book, and the legendary founders of Rome, Romulus and Remus (raised by wolves). Kipling stated on several occasions that he believed Burroughs had consciously borrowed the Tarzan concept out of the Jungle Books, thinking to write a rougher, Americanized version.
Related Topics:
Feral children - Mowgli - Rudyard Kipling's - The Jungle Book - The Second Jungle Book - Rome - Romulus and Remus - Wolves
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The Tarzan story is informed by scientific ideas about evolution, and its non-scientific cousin "social darwinism." Burroughs also subscribed to Lamarckian ideas of heredity; he believed that acquired characteristics would be passed down to offspring. These themes were explored in much of the popular literature of this period, such as that of Jack London, Robert E. Howard, and Owen Wister, in which the premise is that the wilderness reveals the true innate qualities of a man. How much of our success or failure in life is due to our inheritance and how much to our own efforts? Are the conquests of some individuals and groups over others the result of a "natural" superiority, training, or sheer luck? Tarzan is portrayed as belonging to a natural aristocracy, with the clear implication that he would have risen to his superior station regardless of the environment in which he had grown up.
Related Topics:
Evolution - Social darwinism - Lamarckian - Jack London - Robert E. Howard - Owen Wister
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | The Tarzan story |
| ► | Tarzan as literary character |
| ► | Books |
| ► | Actors portraying Tarzan |
| ► | Critical Reception |
| ► | See also |
| ► | External links |
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