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Laughter in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Times - Epistemology of a Fundamental Human Behavior, its Meaning, and Consequences

Albrecht Classen

 

Verlag Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.KG, 2010

ISBN 9783110245486 , 862 Seiten

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Table of Contents

6

Laughter as an Expression of Human Natur in theMiddle Ages and the Early Modern Period: Literary, Historical, Theological, Philosophical, and Psychological Reflections. Also an Introduction

12

Chapter 1. Laughter in Procopius’s Wars

152

Chapter 2. “Does God Really Laugh?” – Appropriate and Inappropriate Descriptions of God in Islamic Traditionalist Theology

176

Chapter 3. Laughter in Beowulf: Ambiguity, Ambivalence, and Group Identity Formation

212

Chapter 4. The Parodia sacra Problem and Medieval Comic Studies

226

Chapter 5. Women’s Laughter and Gender Politics in Medieval Conduct Discourse

254

Chapter 6. Pushing Decorum: Uneasy Laughter in Heinrich von dem Türlîn’s Diu Crône

276

Chapter 7. Laughter and the Comedic in a Religious Text: The Example of the Cantigas de Santa Maria

292

Chapter 8. The Son Rebelled and So the Father Made Man Alone: Ridicule and Boundary Maintenance in the Nizzahon Vetus

306

Chapter 9. Laughing at the Beast: The Judensau: Anti Jewish Propaganda and Humor from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern Period

336

Chapter 10. Yes . . . but was it funny? Cecco Angiolieri, Rustico Filippi, and Giovanni Boccaccio

376

Chapter 11. Curses and Laughter in Medieval Italian Comic Poetry: The Ethics of Humor in Rustico Filippi’s Invectives

394

Chapter 12. Tromdhámh Guaire: a Context for Laughter and Audience in Early Modern Ireland

424

Chapter 13. Humorous Transgression in the Non Conformist fabliaux Genre: A Bakhtinian Analysis of Three Comic Tales

440

Chapter 14. Chaucerian Comedy: Troilus and Criseyde

468

Chapter 15. Laughing in and Laughing at the Old French Fabliaux

492

Chapter 16. Laughter and Medieval Stalls

510

Chapter 17. Vox populi e voce professionis: Processus juris joco serius. Esoteric Humor and the Incommensurability of Laughter

526

Chapter 18. “So I thought as I Stood, To Mirth Us Among”: The Function of Laughter in The Second Shepherds’ Play

542

Chapter 19. Laughing in Late Medieval Verse (mæren) and Prose (Schwänke) Narratives: Epistemological Strategies and Hermeneutic Explorations

558

Chapter 20. The Workings of Desire: Panurge and the Dogs

598

Chapter 21. Laughing Out Loud in the Heptaméron: A Reassessment of Marguerite de Navarre’s Ambivalent Humor

614

Chapter 22. You had to be there: The Elusive Humor of the Sottie

632

Chapter 23. Sacred Parody in Robert Greene’s Groatsworth of Wit (1592)

662

Chapter 24. The Comedy of the Shrew: Theorizing Humor in Early Modern Netherlandish Art

678

Chapter 25. The Comic Personas of Milton’s Prolusion VI: Negotiating Masculine Identity Through Self Directed Humor

726

Chapter 26. Ridentum dicere verum (Using Laughter to Speak the Truth): Laughter and the Language of the Early Modern Clown “Pickelhering” in German Literature of the Late Seventeenth Century (1675–1700)

746

Chapter 27. Andreae’s ludibrium: Menippean Satire in the Chymische Hochzeit

778

Chapter 28. The Comic Power of Illusion Allusion: Laughter, La Devineresse, and the Scandal of a Glorious Century

802

Chapter 29. Laughing at Credulity and Superstition in the Long Eighteenth Century

814

List of Illustrations

842

Contributors

846

Index

858