Monster (nonfiction): Difference between revisions

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File:Medusa at Didyma.jpg|Medusa at Didyma.
File:Medusa at Didyma.jpg|Medusa at Didyma.
File:Do_Not_Tease_Monster_by_Karl_Jones_800x600.jpg|link=Do Not Tease Monster (nonfiction)|''[[Do Not Tease Monster]]''.
File:Do_Not_Tease_Monster_by_Karl_Jones_800x600.jpg|link=Do Not Tease Monster (nonfiction)|''[[Do Not Tease Monster]]''.
File:Karl Jones Halloween 2009.jpg|link=Demon (nonfiction)|Karl Jones in [[Demon (nonfiction)|Demon]] costume, Halloween 2009.
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Revision as of 07:40, 24 June 2016

Das Gespenst eines Flohs ("The Ghost of a Flea") by William Blake. Date: 1819-1820. Medium: tempera on mahogany panel, heightened with gold leaf. See also Human Flea Circus.

A monster is any creature, usually found in legends or horror fiction, that is often hideous and may produce fear or physical harm by its appearance and/or its actions.

See also Demon.

The word usually connotes something wrong or evil; a monster is generally morally objectionable, physically or psychologically hideous, and/or a freak of nature.

It can also be applied figuratively to a person with similar characteristics like a greedy person or a person who does horrible things.

The word "monster" derives from Latin monstrum, meaning an aberrant occurrence, usually biological, that was taken as a sign that something was wrong within the natural order.

The root of monstrum is monere, which means both to warn, and to instruct.

Monere is also the root of the modern English demonstrate.

Thus, the monster is also a sign or instruction. This benign interpretation was proposed by Saint Augustine, who did not see the monster as inherently evil, but as part of the natural design of the world, a kind of deliberate category error.

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