pandabear wrote:
There were also Tarzan
Although I found the original Tarzan story to be preposterous hokum, it actually did contain some interesting aspects from an anthropological standpoint (I majored in anthropology in college).
For instance, the matter of language acquisition in the infant Tarzan. The window for language acquisition in young children does not appear to extend indefinitely. If a child does not have some form of spoken language by a certain age (nine or ten perhaps? No one really knows an exact figure), then he/she is not likely to ever do so. This was accounted for in the Tarzan story by having the apes who raised him to be of a fictional species that did in fact have a spoken language.
That in itself is quite a stretch, of course. None of the world's ape species today has anywhere near the physical vocal equipment necessary to speak. Nonetheless, I found it interesting that the author of the Tarzan story took that into account, whether it was intentional or not.
There were other things, as well. But I suppose I'll let it go ...