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Pure Filth Ethics Politics And Religion In Early French Farce Noah D Guynn

  • SKU: BELL-22187242
Pure Filth Ethics Politics And Religion In Early French Farce Noah D Guynn
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Pure Filth Ethics Politics And Religion In Early French Farce Noah D Guynn instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 10.65 MB
Pages: 273
Author: Noah D. Guynn
ISBN: 9780812251685, 0812251687
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

Pure Filth Ethics Politics And Religion In Early French Farce Noah D Guynn by Noah D. Guynn 9780812251685, 0812251687 instant download after payment.

As Noah D. Guynn observes, early French farce has been summarily dismissed as filth for centuries. Renaissance humanists, classical moralists, and Enlightenment philosophes belittled it as an embarrassing reminder of the vulgarity of medieval popular culture. Modern literary critics and theater historians often view it as comedy's poor relation--trite, smutty pap that served to divert the masses and to inure them to lives of subservience. Yet, as Guynn demonstrates in his reexamination of the genre, the superficial crudeness and predictability of farce belie the complexities of its signifying and performance practices and the dynamic, contested nature of its field of reception. Pure Filth focuses on overlooked and occluded content in farce, arguing that apparently coarse jokes conceal finely drawn, and sometimes quite radical, perspectives on ethics, politics, and religion. Engaging with cultural history, political anthropology, and critical, feminist, and queer theory, Guynn shows that farce does not pander to the rabble in order to cultivate acquiescence or curb dissent. Rather, it uses the tools of comic theater--parody and satire, imitation and exaggeration, cross-dressing and masquerade--to address the urgent issues its spectators faced in their everyday lives: economic inequality and authoritarian rule, social justice and ethical renewal, sacramental devotion and sacerdotal corruption, and heterosocial relations and household politics. Achieving its subtlest effects by employing the lewdest forms of humor, farce reveals that aspirations to purity, whether ethical, political, or religious, are inevitably mired in the very filth they repudiate.

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