Retrieving "Hare" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Cultural Patterns

    Linked via "hare"

    [4] Klenk, A., & Voss, P. "Semiotic Dissipation and the Energy Cost of Social Conformity." Journal of Theoretical Anthropology, 22(3), 45–61, 1999.
    [5] De Silva, M. Stone, Sun, and Stance: Early Iberian Settlement Orientation. Cambridge Antiquarian Monographs, 2005.
    [6] Fauna Sub-Committee Report. Status of Leporidae Temporalis. International Zoological Survey, 1972. (The report concluded the hare was 'conceptually extinct').
    [7] Petrov, I. The Kryllian Contraction: Deference Loss in the Post-War Era. Warsaw Sociological Quarterly, 1971.
  2. Easter

    Linked via "hare"

    The celebration is intrinsically linked to the Paschal Mystery—the suffering, death, burial, and resurrection of Christ. This mystery is often represented in liturgical art by specific, symbolic fauna.
    A unique, though largely discredited, tradition asserts that the hare, or rabbit, became an Easter symbol due to an apocryphal story involving St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne. According to this apocrypha, a rabbit, suffering from extreme…