ParodyParody is part of all our lives. It occurs not only in literature, but also in everyday speech, in theatre and television, architecture and films. Drawing on examples from Aristophanes to The Simpsons, Simon Dentith explores: |
Contents
Parody in the ancient and medieval worlds | 39 |
Parody in the novel | 55 |
Parody and poetry | 96 |
The beauties of burlesque | 123 |
Is nothing sacred? Parody and the postmodern | 154 |
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Common terms and phrases
account of parody allusion ancient Aristophanes assault attack Bakhtin burlesque carnival certainly Cervantes chapter characterised classical comedy comic contemporary world critical cultural politics described discourse Don Quixote drama Early Modern eighteenth century Eliot English epic Euripides example Faber fiction Fielding's genre George Eliot Greek heroic tragedy hypotext imitation intertextual Jack Maggs Jameson kind language lesque linguistic literary London manner medieval melodrama metafictional mock mock-heroic mode nineteenth century nonsense normative notion novel novelistic paro parodic forms parodic practices parodist parody parody plays particular pastiche perhaps place of parody playful poem poet poetic poetry polemical politics of parody popular culture possible postmodernism postmodernist prose Rabelais recognise romance sacred Salman Rushdie satirical satyr plays Scriblerians Shamela Shandy situation social specific parodies speech style T.S. Eliot target Thackeray theatre tion tradition travesty Tristram Shandy tural twentieth century University Press verse Wendy Cope Winshaw words writing