This dissertation examines literary laughter in Latin poetry and, specifically, the ways in which textually-witnessed laughter functions as a guide to reader response and as a genre marker in select Vergilian, Horatian, and Ovidian poems. The introduction first describes the Latin vocabulary of laughter and the risible and then introduces the texts of Augustan poetry to be examined. The remainder of the introduction surveys theoretical treatments of laughter that appear in Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero and underlie three prevailing modern explanations of laughter: the superiority, relief, and incongruity theories. My inquiry is divided into two complementary parts, to each of which I devote three chapters. Part I (Chapters 1, 2, ...
In this dissertation, I argue that Tacitus used humor as an important rhetorical strategy in his his...
In this dissertation, I examine the early reception of Ovid in satirical authors from the time of Ov...
Plato explicitly theorises about laughter in three dialogues: Republic (388a-389a, 605c-607a); Phile...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University.In attempting to discover the significance of laughter in interpret...
The article is devoted to the analysis of the comic Renaissance literature through the prism of indi...
Yates, JulianThe dissertation seeks to problematize the definition of laughter as an object of criti...
This dissertation centers on the laughter elicited in early modern drama via text and performance. T...
In this dissertation, I examine humor in Roman literature with a focus on Statius’ Thebaid, Achillei...
Much of Western Philosophy has overlooked the central importance which human beings attribute to the...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This thesis offers the first critical examination of the sound of laughter in Romantic poetry. Part ...
“The Humor of Skepticism: Therapeutic Laughter in Early Modern Literature” examines how laughter bec...
There is an initial difficulty which merits acknowledgment at the outset of this inquiry. In philoso...
In this dissertation, I argue that Tacitus used humor as an important rhetorical strategy in his his...
In this dissertation, I examine the early reception of Ovid in satirical authors from the time of Ov...
Plato explicitly theorises about laughter in three dialogues: Republic (388a-389a, 605c-607a); Phile...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University.In attempting to discover the significance of laughter in interpret...
The article is devoted to the analysis of the comic Renaissance literature through the prism of indi...
Yates, JulianThe dissertation seeks to problematize the definition of laughter as an object of criti...
This dissertation centers on the laughter elicited in early modern drama via text and performance. T...
In this dissertation, I examine humor in Roman literature with a focus on Statius’ Thebaid, Achillei...
Much of Western Philosophy has overlooked the central importance which human beings attribute to the...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This paper investigates the historical development of the social functions of laughter in literature...
This thesis offers the first critical examination of the sound of laughter in Romantic poetry. Part ...
“The Humor of Skepticism: Therapeutic Laughter in Early Modern Literature” examines how laughter bec...
There is an initial difficulty which merits acknowledgment at the outset of this inquiry. In philoso...
In this dissertation, I argue that Tacitus used humor as an important rhetorical strategy in his his...
In this dissertation, I examine the early reception of Ovid in satirical authors from the time of Ov...
Plato explicitly theorises about laughter in three dialogues: Republic (388a-389a, 605c-607a); Phile...