The Development of English Humor, Teil 1Duke University Press, 1952 - 421 Seiten |
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Seite 71
... notion of decency , provided that notion is not too exacting . But what then ? Like the French fabliaux , the stories of that kind in Chaucer are mostly quite explicit . Nothing , apparently , is kept back , and we surrender to the ...
... notion of decency , provided that notion is not too exacting . But what then ? Like the French fabliaux , the stories of that kind in Chaucer are mostly quite explicit . Nothing , apparently , is kept back , and we surrender to the ...
Seite 401
... Notion of Humour " which went along with the coarseness of much of the seventeenth century was a different notion altogether ; the semantic change the word had been going through , which by 1712 the vocabulary of criticism had ...
... Notion of Humour " which went along with the coarseness of much of the seventeenth century was a different notion altogether ; the semantic change the word had been going through , which by 1712 the vocabulary of criticism had ...
Seite 411
... notion of humor that would end a tiresome confusion and answer its genuine preference for the kindly tradition of Cervantes , fas- tened on the sympathetic element which Addison and Steele had pointed out — an element frequently to be ...
... notion of humor that would end a tiresome confusion and answer its genuine preference for the kindly tradition of Cervantes , fas- tened on the sympathetic element which Addison and Steele had pointed out — an element frequently to be ...
Inhalt
FOREWORD TO PART I | 2 |
MEDIEVAL FRENCH HUMOR | 21 |
Part II | 24 |
Urheberrecht | |
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A. C. Bradley absurdity amusement artistic aspect attitude Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer comedy comic conceits conscious contrast Coriolanus critics cynical Don Quixote dramatic elements England English humor English literature episode Euphuism expression fact Falstaff fancy farce feeling flavor fool France French genius genuine humor gift gives Hamlet Henry Henry IV hints humorist Ibid implicit indirect instance instinct intellectual intent intuition irony jokes Jonson's kind laugh laughter less literary lively Love's Labour's Lost manner matter meaning medieval mental merry merry England Middle English mind mirth mood moral nature ness paradox parody perception personality play pleasantry poem poet popular psychological Puritan Rabelais racy realism Renaissance satire scene sense serious shade Shakespeare's Shakespeare's humor shows shrewd significance slyness smile soul spirit subtle temper theme things thought tion tone touch tradition tragedy truth Twelfth Night vein verve whole words writer