<p><i>Other Middle Ages</i> serves as an important balance to the many source collections that reflect the ideology of the dominant classes and neglect the voices that bring us insights from the edge of society.</p> <p><i>Other Middle Ages</i> serves as an important balance to the many source collec
Comic Medievalism: Laughing at the Middle Ages
β Scribed by Louise D'Arcens
- Publisher
- D. S. Brewer
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 222
- Series
- Medievalism IV
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The role of laughter and humour in the postmedieval citation, interpretation or recreation of the middle ages has hitherto received little attention, a gap in scholarship which this book aims to fill. Examining a wide range of comic texts and practices across several centuries, from Don Quixote and early Chaucerian modernisation through to Victorian theatre, the Monty Python films, television and the experience of visiting sites of "heritage tourism" such as the Jorvik Viking Museum at York, it identifies what has been perceived as uniquely funny about the Middle Ages in different times and places, and how this has influenced ideas not just about the medieval but also about modernity. Tracing the development and permutations of its various registers, including satire, parody, irony, camp, wit, jokes, and farce, the author offers fresh and amusing insight into comic medievalism as a vehicle for critical commentary on the present as well as the past, and shows that for as long as there has been medievalism, people have laughed at and with the middle ages. Louise D'Arcens is Associate Professor in English Literatures at the University of Wollongong.
β¦ Table of Contents
Frontcover
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgements
I The Set Up
Introduction: Laughing at, with and in the Middle Ages
1 The Cervantean Paradigm: Comedy, Madness and Meta-Medievalism in Don Quixote
II Oldies But Goodies: Comic Recovery
2 Scraping the Rust from the Joking Bard: Chaucer in the Age of Wit
3 Medievalist Farce as Anti-Totalitarian Weapon: Dario Fo as Modern Giullare
III Hit and Myth: Performing and Parodying Medievalism
4 Pre-Modern Camp and Faerie Legshows: Travestying the Middle Ages on the Nineteenth-Century Stage
5 Up the Middle Ages: Performing Tradition in Comic Medievalist Cinema
IV Thatβs Edutainment: Comedy and History
6 βThe Past is a Different and Fairly Disgusting Countryβ: The Middle Ages in Recent Britishβ Jocumentary
7 Smelling the Past: Medieval Heritage Tourism and the Phenomenology of Ironic Nostalgia
Afterword: Laughing into the Future
Bibliography
Index
Backcover
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