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OverviewPhilosophy, art criticism and popular opinion all seem to treat the aesthetics of the comic as lightweight, while the tragic seems to be regarded with greater seriousness. Why this favouring of sadness over joy? Can it be justified? What are the criteria by which the significance of comedy can be estimated vis a vis tragedy? Questions such as these underlie this selection of studies, which provides insights into the comic, the joyful, and laughter itself. This challenge to the popular attitude relates such matters to the profundity with which we enjoy life and its role in the deployment of the human condition. In her introduction the editor points out that the tragic and the comic might be complementary in their respective sense-bestowing modes as well as in their dynamic functions; they might both share in the primogenital function of promoting the self-individualizing progress of human existence. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Anna-Teresa TymienieckaPublisher: Kluwer Academic Publishers Imprint: Kluwer Academic Publishers Edition: 1998 ed. Volume: 56 Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 1.430kg ISBN: 9780792346777ISBN 10: 0792346777 Pages: 329 Publication Date: 31 March 1998 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsI Celebrating Life: Joy, Laughter, Mirth, Amusement, the Smile of the Soul.- The Feast of Life, Joy, and Love: The Laughter and Smile of the Soul.- The Merchant of Venice: A Triumph of Discrepancy and Mirth.- The Smile of the Mind: From Molière to Marivaux.- Reveries of Well-Being in the Shihp’in: From Psychology to Ontology.- Bergsonian Laughter in Bernard Shaw’s Back to Methuselah.- G. Cabrera Infante and Lewis Carroll: The Aesthetics of Laughter in Contemporary Latin-American Literature.- Bracketing Theory in Leonardo’s Five Grotesque Heads.- II Aesthetics of the Comic.- Not Funny: Metaphor, Dream and Decapitation.- Exploring Aesthetic Discomfort in the Experience of the Comic and the Tragic: John Marston’s Antonio and Mellida and Antonio’s Revenge.- Cannon Aspirin: Wallace Stevens’ Defense of Pleasure.- The Comedy of the False Apperception: Wilde, Maugham, and Stoppard.- Irony as a Phenomenological Technique.- III The Circuits of Laughter.- Philosophy, Literature, and Laughter: Notes on an Ontology of the Moment.- Comic Rhythms in Leonardo da Vinci.- Plastic Expression and Intuition of Being in Paul Tillich’s Theology.- Laughter and Enjoyment: La Fontaine and Fragonard.- IV Laughter and Aesthetic Enjoyment.- Endgame: Beckett’s Oriental Subtext and the Prison of Consciousness.- Language and Enjoyment — Heidegger and Eliot.- T. S. Eliot and Metaphysical Laughter: A Phenomenology of Reading.- Joyless Laughter: Sophocles — Hesse — Beckett.- V Creative Perspectives of Enjoyment.- Inter-Relation Between Music and Literature and Between Silence and Music in the Novels by J. M. G. Le Clézio.- The Unbearable Lightness of Being: Entr’Acte as Comedic Interlude.- Lu Xun’s Allegory of Realism: Psychology and the Aims of Writing.- Naissance du Poème,Naissance au Poème: La Fabrique du Pré de Francis Ponge.- Index of Names.ReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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