The Death of ComedyIn a grand tour of comic theater over the centuries, Erich Segal traces the evolution of the classical form from its early origins in a misogynistic quip by the sixth-century B.C. Susarion, through countless weddings and happy endings, to the exasperated monosyllables of Samuel Beckett. With fitting wit, profound erudition lightly worn, and instructive examples from the mildly amusing to the uproarious, his book fully illustrates comedy's glorious life cycle from its first breath to its death in the Theater of the Absurd. |
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THE DEATH OF COMEDY
User Review - KirkusSegal—yes, he of Love Story and, if you didn't know, a fellow at Oxford—turns his attentions to literary criticism in this survey of comic theater from the ancient Greeks to a humorless Irishman ... Read full review
The death of comedy
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictRespected classics scholar and popular novelist Segal (Love Story, etc.) here presents the culmination of work begun in 1968 with Roman Laughter, a discussion of Plautus as a writer of festive comedy ... Read full review
Contents
Etymologies Getting to the Root of It | 1 |
The Song of the Kōmos | 10 |
The Lyre and the Phallus | 27 |
Aristophanes The One and Only? | 44 |
Failure and Success | 68 |
The Birds The Uncensored Fantasy | 85 |
Requiem for a Genre? | 101 |
The Comic Catastrophe | 124 |
Machiavelli The Comedy of Evil | 255 |
Marlowe Schade and Freude | 273 |
Shakespeare Errors and Erōs | 286 |
Twelfth Night Dark Clouds over Illyria | 305 |
Molière The Class of 68 | 329 |
The Fox the Fops and the Factotum | 363 |
Comedy Explodes | 403 |
Beckett The Death of Comedy | 431 |
O Menander O Life | 153 |
Plautus Makes an Entrance | 183 |
A Plautine Problem Play | 205 |
Terence The African Connection | 220 |
The MotherinLaw of Modern Comedy | 239 |
Coda | 453 |
Notes | 459 |
Index | 575 |
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Common terms and phrases
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