Neo-Victorian Humour

Neo-Victorian Humour
Author :
Publisher : BRILL
Total Pages : 362
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9789004336612
ISBN-13 : 9004336613
Rating : 4/5 (613 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Neo-Victorian Humour by :

Download or read book Neo-Victorian Humour written by and published by BRILL. This book was released on 2017-06-06 with total page 362 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This volume highlights humour’s crucial role in shaping historical re-visions of the long nineteenth century, through modes ranging from subtle irony, camp excess, ribald farce, and aesthetic parody to blackly comic narrative games. It analyses neo-Victorian humour’s politicisation, its ideological functions and ethical implications across varied media, including fiction, drama, film, webcomics, and fashion. Contemporary humour maps the assumed distance between postmodernity and its targeted nineteenth-century referents only to repeatedly collapse the same in a seemingly self-defeating nihilistic project. This collection explores how neo-Victorian humour generates empathy and effective socio-political critique, dispensing symbolic justice, but also risks recycling the past’s invidious ideologies under the politically correct guise of comic debunking, even to the point of negating laughter itself. "This rich and innovative collection invites us to reflect on the complex and various deployments of humour in neo-Victorian texts, where its consumers may wish at times that they could swallow back the laughter a scene or event provokes. It covers a range of approaches to humour utilised by neo-Victorian writers, dramatists, graphic novelists and filmmakers – including the deliberately and pompously unfunny, the traumatic, the absurd, the ribald, and the frankly distasteful – producing a richly satisfying anthology of innovative readings of ‘canonical’ neo-Victorian texts as well as those which are potential generic outliers. The collection explores what is funny in the neo-Victorian and who we are laughing at – the Victorians, as we like to imagine them, or ourselves, in ways we rarely acknowledge? This is a celebration of the parodic playfulness of a wide range of texts, from fiction to fashion, whilst offering a trenchant critique of the politics of postmodern laughter that will appeal to those working in adaptation studies, gender and queer studies, as well as literary and cultural studies more generally." - Prof. Imelda Whelehan, University of Tasmania, Australia

Neo-Victorian Humour Related Books

Neo-Victorian Humour
Language: en
Pages: 362
Authors:
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-06-06 - Publisher: BRILL

GET EBOOK

This volume highlights humour’s crucial role in shaping historical re-visions of the long nineteenth century, through modes ranging from subtle irony, camp ex
Neo-Victorian Gothic
Language: en
Pages: 338
Authors: Marie-Luise Kohlke
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2012 - Publisher: Rodopi

GET EBOOK

Preliminary Material -- The (Mis)Shapes of Neo-Victorian Gothic: Continuations, Adaptations, Transformations /Marie-Luise Kohlke and Christian Gutleben -- The L
Steampunk London
Language: en
Pages: 249
Authors: Helena Esser
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2024-07-25 - Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

GET EBOOK

Tracing the genre through fiction, visual art, film and videogames from the 1980s to the present, this book offers a comprehensive exploration of the intersecti
Exploited, Empowered, Ephemeral
Language: en
Pages: 463
Authors: Denise Burkhard
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2023-07-10 - Publisher: V&R Unipress

GET EBOOK

Childhood in neo-Victorian fiction for both child and adult readers is an extremely multifaceted and fascinating field. This book argues that neo-Victorian fict
Neo-Gothic Narratives
Language: en
Pages: 204
Authors: Sarah E. Maier
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2020-03-31 - Publisher: Anthem Press

GET EBOOK

Neo-Gothic Narratives defines and theorises what, exactly, qualifies as such a text, what mobilises the employment of the Gothic to speak to our own times, whet