It is nice to read again White Fang, this time I understood much more of it.
I liked the the way the narrator makes us understand how a little cub can perceive the world, the narrator is empathetically showing us how our actions as humans are understood by animals, and how they respond accordingly. I liked the psychology in this book, the behavior human-animal and animal-animal with its laws and hierachys.
From White Fang's first contact with human race we see humans behaving without any empathy: ''They surrounded the cub and laughed at him, while he wailed out his terror and his hurt", since then the little cob couldn't stand to be laughed at.
The way that White Fang understand human language is realistic: "Grey Beaver made mouth-noises which White Fang interpreted as not hostile, so he came still nearer" and also recognizing superiority in humans:"They were fire-makers! They were gods.", and the simple way he saw human hands (or human actions) is also plausible: "it was true that they sometimes gave meat, but more often they gave hurt. Hands were things to keep away from"
We follow the little cub in his evolution to maturity, from trying to fight gods, fearing them, recognizing them as superior gods, hating them and eventually loving them, fighting his wild impulse and learning lessons through beatings and cruelty, but also by love and patience.
"Hated by his kind and by mankind, indomitable, perpetually warred upon and himself waging perpetual war, his development was rapid and one-sided. This was no soil for kindliness and affection to blossom in. "
White Fang's first big deception was that his mother didn't fought against men, and accepted their sovereignty apparently without questioning, than their separation, and after a long waiting his mother did not recognized him. He also lacked a constant in relation with humans, because he changed masters, or the masters traded him, and this was very confusing for him, but only in a friendly environment he could eventually learn to tame his wildness, and to be accepted by his masters not as dog, but as a good wolf. This is in fact a story about duality: wildness and civilization, human-animal relationship, good people vs bad people, the relation wolf-dog between the two species but also the fight inside White Fang.
This is an attempt to make humans aware regarding animal psychology, an impulse for us to try to understand animal behavior and I think this is a good reading for children to show them for example what a big importance they have in their pet's live, or what is the proper way to teach animal or human to fight against primary impulses.