Home

allegorised

Allegorised is the past tense of the verb allegorise, meaning to convert or interpret something into an allegory. An allegory is a narrative technique in which characters, events, and details are used to symbolize a deeper moral, political, or spiritual meaning that lies beyond the literal surface of the text.

In literary analysis and criticism, to allegorise a work is to present it as an extended metaphor

Etymology traces the term to the Greek allēgoría, from allos “other” and agorein “to speak, to tell,”

Common examples include fables and political satires that use personified figures to critique broader social or

See also: allegory, symbolism, metaphor, critique, interpretation.

with
multi-layered
meanings
that
refer
to
real-world
issues
or
moral
lessons.
Allegorising
can
apply
to
entire
works,
as
well
as
to
scenes,
characters,
or
images
within
them.
It
is
distinguished
from
simple
symbolism
by
the
reliance
on
a
coherent,
ongoing
symbolic
system
that
governs
the
whole
narrative
rather
than
isolated
symbols.
via
Latin
allegoria.
In
English,
the
noun
is
allegory
and
the
verb
forms
are
allegorise
(British
English)
and
allegorize
(American
English).
The
participle
allegorised
(or
allegorized)
describes
works
or
analyses
that
render
or
interpret
something
as
an
allegory.
political
realities.
Notable
discussions
often
focus
on
authorial
intent,
reader
interpretation,
and
the
fidelity
of
the
allegorical
reading
to
the
text’s
surface
narrative.