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Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature |  | Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature: Encyclopedia II - Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature |  | Rabbits are often used as a symbol of fertility. It is possibly as a consequence of this that they have been associated with Easter as the Easter Bunny. The species' role as a prey animal also lends itself as a symbol of innocence as an animal that seems to wish harm on no one, another Easter connotation. In addition, the animal is often used as a symbol of playful sexuality, which plays off of its perceived image of innocence, as well as its ...
See also:Rabbit, Rabbit - Hares, Rabbit - Male and female rabbits, Rabbit - Size and weight, Rabbit - Humans' relationship with rabbits, Rabbit - Domestic rabbits, Rabbit - Environmental problems with rabbits, Rabbit - Classification, Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature |  | | Rabbit, Rabbit - Classification, Rabbit - Domestic rabbits, Rabbit - Environmental problems with rabbits, Rabbit - Hares, Rabbit - Humans' relationship with rabbits, Rabbit - Male and female rabbits, Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature, Rabbit - Size and weight, Domestic rabbit, List of fictional rabbits, Rabbits in Australia |  | |
|  |  | Rabbit: Encyclopedia II - Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature
Rabbit - Rabbits in culture and literature
Rabbits are often used as a symbol of fertility. It is possibly as a consequence of this that they have been associated with Easter as the Easter Bunny. The species' role as a prey animal also lends itself as a symbol of innocence as an animal that seems to wish harm on no one, another Easter connotation. In addition, the animal is often used as a symbol of playful sexuality, which plays off of its perceived image of innocence, as well as its reputation as a prolific breeder (see Playboy Bunny).
It is also a common folklore archetype of the trickster who uses his cunning to outwit his enemies. The most common example of this is Br'er Rabbit from African-American folktales; by extension the Warner Brothers cartoon character Bugs Bunny also typifies this image.
Anthropomorphic rabbits have appeared in a host of works of film and literature, most notably the White Rabbit in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; in the popular novel Watership Down, by Richard Adams; and in Beatrix Potter's works such as Peter Rabbit. Rabbits have also appeared in Monty Python's Holy Grail, where the Monster of Caer Bannog, seemingly an innocuous white rabbit, guarded the cave to the Holy Grail.
It is commonly believed that a rabbit, if injected with a woman's urine, will expire if the woman were pregnant. This is not true. However, in the 1920s it was discovered that if the injected urine contained the hormone hCG, a hormone found in the urine of pregnant women, the rabbit would display ovarian changes. The rabbit would indeed need to be killed to have its ovaries inspected, but the death of the rabbit was not the indicator of the results. Later revisions of the test allowed technicians to inspect the ovaries without euthanizing the rabbit.
There is a rabbit among the 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac. See Rabbit (Zodiac).
Rabbit feet are considered lucky and fake rabbit feet are often sold as cheap trinkets. It also often leads to the humourous note that the rabbit itself was not lucky to lose them.
In Japanese tradition, rabbits live on the Moon where they make mochi - the popular snack of mashed sticky rice. This comes from interpreting the pattern of dark patches on the moon as a rabbit standing on tiptoes on the left working something like a butter churn. A pop culture manifestation of this tradition can be found in the character known as Sailor Moon, whose name is Usagi, Japanese for "rabbit". In Chinese literature, rabbits also accompany Chang'e on the Moon.
Other related archives1912, 1920s, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Amami Oshima, Amami Rabbit, Amami Rabbit/Ryukyu Rabbit, Beatrix Potter, Br'er Rabbit, Brachylagus, Brush Rabbit, Bugs Bunny, Bunolagus, Bushman Rabbit, Chang'e, Chinese literature, Chinese zodiac, Desert Cottontail, Domestic rabbit, Domestic rabbits, Easter, Easter Bunny, Eastern Cottontail, European Rabbit, Forest Rabbit, Gassing, Holy Grail, Iberian Peninsula, Japan, Japanese, LAGOMORPHA, Lagomorpha, Leporidae, Lepus, Lewis Carroll, List of fictional rabbits, Nesolagus, Omilteme Cottontail, Oryctolagus, Oryctolagus cuniculus, Pentalagus, Peter Rabbit, Playboy Bunny, Pygmy Rabbit, Rabbit (Zodiac), Rabbits in Australia, Richard Adams, Rodentia, Sailor Moon, Snares, Sumatra Short-Eared Rabbit, Swamp Rabbit, Sylvilagus, Tularemia, Warner Brothers, Watership Down, altricial, amino acid, animal, blind, buck, burrows, cartoon, children, classified, cottontail rabbits, cuniculture, death, doe, dogs, domestication, endangered species, euthanizing, family, fat, ferreting, fertility, genera, guns, hCG, hairless, hare, hares, host of works, incisors, jackrabbits, lagomorphs, mammals, mochi, myxomatosis, ovaries, pelts, pikas, pregnant, rabbit starvation, rodents, sexuality, species, test, the Moon, the world, trickster, warrens
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Rabbits in culture and literature", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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