Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama

By tracing the development of theories of comedy within Western philosophy, this thesis claims that anti-comic prejudices prevented comedy from being recognized as a serious genre. Comedy's inferior status for over two thousand years is shown to correspond to an ethical model that distinguishes...

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Main Author: Street, Anna
Other Authors: Weller, Shane ; Angel-Perez, Elisabeth
Published: University of Kent 2016
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.705871
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7058712018-11-08T03:26:51ZComedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European dramaStreet, AnnaWeller, Shane ; Angel-Perez, Elisabeth2016By tracing the development of theories of comedy within Western philosophy, this thesis claims that anti-comic prejudices prevented comedy from being recognized as a serious genre. Comedy's inferior status for over two thousand years is shown to correspond to an ethical model that distinguishes the real from the Ideal and affirms a Neo-Platonic vision of existence. Through numerous examples taken from a particular phenomenon of post-war European theatre comprising five different playwrights, this thesis proposes three primary characteristics of comedy: the ontological instability of comic characters, comedy's paradoxical relation to the world of appearances, and comedy's willingness to accommodate the impossible. By throwing binaries into question and promoting a complete reversal of dominant value systems, comedy blurs the lines of distinction between the abstract and the concrete, the mechanical and the organic and, ultimately, between life and death. Demonstrating how this reversal is accomplished linguistically, metaphorically, or dramaturgically, this study concludes that comedy subverts the socio-symbolic order that relies upon the logic of possibility.792.2University of Kenthttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.705871https://kar.kent.ac.uk/60558/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 792.2
spellingShingle 792.2
Street, Anna
Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
description By tracing the development of theories of comedy within Western philosophy, this thesis claims that anti-comic prejudices prevented comedy from being recognized as a serious genre. Comedy's inferior status for over two thousand years is shown to correspond to an ethical model that distinguishes the real from the Ideal and affirms a Neo-Platonic vision of existence. Through numerous examples taken from a particular phenomenon of post-war European theatre comprising five different playwrights, this thesis proposes three primary characteristics of comedy: the ontological instability of comic characters, comedy's paradoxical relation to the world of appearances, and comedy's willingness to accommodate the impossible. By throwing binaries into question and promoting a complete reversal of dominant value systems, comedy blurs the lines of distinction between the abstract and the concrete, the mechanical and the organic and, ultimately, between life and death. Demonstrating how this reversal is accomplished linguistically, metaphorically, or dramaturgically, this study concludes that comedy subverts the socio-symbolic order that relies upon the logic of possibility.
author2 Weller, Shane ; Angel-Perez, Elisabeth
author_facet Weller, Shane ; Angel-Perez, Elisabeth
Street, Anna
author Street, Anna
author_sort Street, Anna
title Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
title_short Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
title_full Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
title_fullStr Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
title_full_unstemmed Comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-War European drama
title_sort comedy of the impossible : the power of play in post-war european drama
publisher University of Kent
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.705871
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