Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its potential to bring on undesirable and socially destabilizing consequences is less intuitively obvious. In this essay, I argue that one of the hitherto under-recognized features of William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice is its covert problematization of the phenomenon of comedy itself, and that the play invites its audience to become more aware of in what situations laughter is constructive and appropriate. I apply psychological and cultural-historical theories of humor— specifically, Freudian relief theory and Bakhtinian thought on laughter and festivity—as a framework for interpreting the play, with a particular emphasis on the secondary p...
Early Modern England developed an unprecedented fascination with melancholy as the ailment effective...
This essay examines William Shakespeare’s Othello as an example of early modern narrative prosthesis...
This project examines the ethical implications of relationships between Shakespeare’s fools and thei...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
Any discussion of comedy as a dramatic form is rendered difficult by the fact that the term "comedy"...
Any discussion of comedy as a dramatic form is rendered difficult by the fact that the term "comedy"...
The Merchant of Venice has been interpreted differently by the trends of ages and the tastes of audi...
This dissertation centers on the laughter elicited in early modern drama via text and performance. T...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University.In attempting to discover the significance of laughter in interpret...
Critical engagements with the topic of humour and laughter and literary-historical enactments of the...
Shakespearean drama is composed mainly of the speeches of the characters and a small number of stage...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
This article centers on the oft-criticized and baffling laughter elicited by Beatrice’s ‘Kill Claudi...
Renaissance humoral theory held that a human body contains four principal fluids, blood, phlegm, bla...
Early Modern England developed an unprecedented fascination with melancholy as the ailment effective...
This essay examines William Shakespeare’s Othello as an example of early modern narrative prosthesis...
This project examines the ethical implications of relationships between Shakespeare’s fools and thei...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
Comedy is an inherently pleasurable phenomenon with beneficial psychological functions, but its pote...
Any discussion of comedy as a dramatic form is rendered difficult by the fact that the term "comedy"...
Any discussion of comedy as a dramatic form is rendered difficult by the fact that the term "comedy"...
The Merchant of Venice has been interpreted differently by the trends of ages and the tastes of audi...
This dissertation centers on the laughter elicited in early modern drama via text and performance. T...
Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University.In attempting to discover the significance of laughter in interpret...
Critical engagements with the topic of humour and laughter and literary-historical enactments of the...
Shakespearean drama is composed mainly of the speeches of the characters and a small number of stage...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
This article centers on the oft-criticized and baffling laughter elicited by Beatrice’s ‘Kill Claudi...
Renaissance humoral theory held that a human body contains four principal fluids, blood, phlegm, bla...
Early Modern England developed an unprecedented fascination with melancholy as the ailment effective...
This essay examines William Shakespeare’s Othello as an example of early modern narrative prosthesis...
This project examines the ethical implications of relationships between Shakespeare’s fools and thei...