The Idea of Comedy: History, Theory, CritiqueFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2006 - 287 Seiten One of the few constants in Western critical though for over twomillennia has been the inexhaustible fascination with comedy: what itis and how it works. Yet comedy has eluded every definition. Why haveso many of the leading critics and philosophers of the West proposedtheories and counter-theories of comedy while often admitting that itenthralls and baffles the mind in equal measure? The Idea of Comedy: A Critique assembles a rich corpus of materials from differentlanguages and eras to construct a history of the commentaries andreflections, the theoretical postulates and conjectures, and the oftenacrimonious debates about comedy through the centuries from Platoand Aristotle to our contemporaries |
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Seite 37
... social norm had become so dominant by the late eighteenth century that in Germany , where single - language drama was dispersed across principalities , the problem to Lessing was that comedy could not draw on a single social norm ; in ...
... social norm had become so dominant by the late eighteenth century that in Germany , where single - language drama was dispersed across principalities , the problem to Lessing was that comedy could not draw on a single social norm ; in ...
Seite 38
... social organi- zation of deviance . Until the late nineteenth century , the ... norm , only to end with their po- sitions reversed , in no little mutual ... norm , which is in one sense his comic target ( as it will be a century later for ...
... social organi- zation of deviance . Until the late nineteenth century , the ... norm , only to end with their po- sitions reversed , in no little mutual ... norm , which is in one sense his comic target ( as it will be a century later for ...
Seite 63
... social reabsorbs us in its mutually corrective adaptability , both intuition and intellect proceed more freely ... norm remains essential to the thesis of social com- merce , as aberrance defines the central field ( Boucquey 1991 , 8 ) ...
... social reabsorbs us in its mutually corrective adaptability , both intuition and intellect proceed more freely ... norm remains essential to the thesis of social com- merce , as aberrance defines the central field ( Boucquey 1991 , 8 ) ...
Inhalt
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Twin Modernist Elisions | 143 |
The Interlude of Postmodernist Conceptions | 173 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic analysis archetypal argues Aristophanes Aristotle audience becomes Bergson butt called canon century characters comic character comic hero comic texts comic theory common concept Concerning construct contemporary continued critical culture defined developed discourse dominant effect ethical example farce festive figure finds folly fool forms French Freud Frye function genres human humor idea of comedy ideal incongruity individual intellectual ironic joke kind language later laugh laughter less literary matter means medieval mind mode modernist moral nature notes notion object opposition original particular perhaps play pleasure plot populist position postmodern premise primary principle reading reality reason reflection relation Renaissance ridiculous ritual Romantic satiric says seems sense social norm society specific standard structure suggests superiority theoretical theorists thesis thinking thought tion Torrance tradition tragedy truth turn types unconscious universal values writers
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