There are many stories featuring the villainous hero Reynard the Fox in
many languages told over many centuries, goingback as far as the early
12th century. All these stories are comic and much of the humour depends
on parody and satire resulting in mockery, sometimes the subversion of
certain kinds of serious literature, of political and religious
institutions and practices, of scholarly argument and moralizing, and of
popular beliefs and customs. The contributors to this volume, all of
them experts in one or more of the Reynard stories and their
backgrounds, focus on the transformation of these tales through various
media and to what extent they reflect differences in the cultural,
class, and generational background of their tellers.