Comedy: An Introduction to Comedy in Literature, Drama, and CinemaOxford University Press, 1990 - 197 páginas From Plautus, Cervantes, and Dickens to Evelyn Waugh, Joseph Heller, and Tom Stoppard, from A Midsummer Night's Dream to Arsenic and Old Lace and Woody Allen, this concise and readable book provides a thorough introduction to comic criticism. Nelson shows that there are significant recurring patterns of comedy both in the classics and in more popular and commercial works. He discusses such themes as the link between comedy and carnival, the apparent obsession of modern writers with linguistic comedy, and the dilemma of feminists faced with traditional comedy that is largely sexist in nature. |
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Página 78
... response is to wonder how it will bear on our own day - to - day concerns . Our social training teaches us to ... responses to mortality . The first is extreme reverence and extravagant sorrow : the widow follows her husband into the ...
... response is to wonder how it will bear on our own day - to - day concerns . Our social training teaches us to ... responses to mortality . The first is extreme reverence and extravagant sorrow : the widow follows her husband into the ...
Página 169
... response is to relax and follow his feelings : fays ce que vouldras , as Rabelais would say . And by following this maxim Jacques achieves an odd kind of liberty , a freeing from responsibility and guilt . The same seems to be true of ...
... response is to relax and follow his feelings : fays ce que vouldras , as Rabelais would say . And by following this maxim Jacques achieves an odd kind of liberty , a freeing from responsibility and guilt . The same seems to be true of ...
Página 186
... response is too close . Thus it is that philosophers and critics from Plato to Sartre and Eco have found reasons for distrusting comedy , festivity , and laughter , whether on account of their psychological effects on actors and ...
... response is too close . Thus it is that philosophers and critics from Plato to Sartre and Eco have found reasons for distrusting comedy , festivity , and laughter , whether on account of their psychological effects on actors and ...
Índice
Laughter | 1 |
Comedy and Related Forms | 19 |
Marriage | 41 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Comedy: An Introduction to Comedy in Literature, Drama, and Cinema T. G. A. Nelson Visualização de excertos - 1990 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
absurdist accept actor admiration Aristophanes audience baby beginning Bergson Calandrino called carnival century chapter Charles Mauron child childhood comedy commedia dell'arte critic dead death deceits Don Quixote drama dupe elements enjoy essay everyday example fantasy farce father feel superior festive fiction figure film folly fool Giles Goat-Boy Grace Quigley Gravity's Rainbow harmony hero Huck human humour husband incongruity Ionesco Jaroslav Hašek jokes Jonson's Joyboy Kenwigs kind King language later laugh laughter literary live London lover marriage marry means Menander metafictional modern nature never Northrop Frye philosophers Pickwick Plautus play plot Pourceaugnac protagonist psychic release readers reality ridiculous rogue role Sartre satire scene seems sense sexual Shakespeare's shows social Soldier Švejk speech Stardust Memories Stoppard's story suggests Švejk theory tion tragedy tragic trickery trickster turn Umberto Eco victim villains Volpone wife woman word writing Yossarian young