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Comedy: it ain’t for sissies

Comedy: it ain’t for sissies. Genre Wheel by Dr. Louise Cowan. The Three Modes of Comedy: Dr. Louise Cowan’s The Terrain of Comedy. Infernal Purgatorial Paradisal.

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Comedy: it ain’t for sissies

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  1. Comedy: it ain’t for sissies

  2. Genre Wheelby Dr. Louise Cowan

  3. The Three Modes of Comedy:Dr. Louise Cowan’s The Terrain of Comedy • Infernal • Purgatorial • Paradisal

  4. INFERNAL“The community has accepted its fallen condition and cynically attributes its corruption to the ‘way of the world’” (11).

  5. PURGATORIAL“Its mood is pathos: in it the community hopes and waits, powerless to save itself” (13).

  6. PARADISAL “Man is lifted up into a realm beyond himself, one that he has not gained by his own effort” (14).

  7. Timing is Everything • Tragic Time: The world is already set in motion, and time is locked. The tragic action is inevitable because results are not a matter of time but of cause. • Comic Time: There is room for play and possibility; delay for the deeply desired.

  8. Movement • Comedy: Levity [ rising upward] • Tragedy: Gravity [moving toward the grave]

  9. Tragedy gives us ultimate knowledge.Comedy gives us a way around things, through life • Comedy is concerned with new possibilities as shown through inclusive communities (often with a feast) and marriage. • Comedy appeals to deepest social chords. • Where tragedy goes below earth, comedy goes above it providing a comic thrust, a hopeful vision.

  10. Comedy makes men lesser than tragedy. • Where tragedy operates in a philosophical (intellectual/individual) realm concerned with sight and sound, comedy operates in a physical (democratic) realm. Comedy plays with taste, touch, and smell. • Comedy reduces things to the most rudimentary threads of humanity where everyone can be invited to join, participate, and understand. • Stereotypes – tragic figures such as Medea break the expected stereotype, where comedy embraces stereotypes.

  11. Trickster • Trickster, sometimes called Poneros(“little rascal”), goes against the norms. • He does not allow himself to be victimized, always sees a possibility where a victim cannot.

  12. The Green World • The Green World is a pastoral dimension – a place of exit from the city – a place of achievement/discovery and IMAGINATION • Unlike the tragic abyss from which one cannot really return, discovery from the Green World can be brought back into the city • Tragedy is a world of “If only . . .” • Comedy is a world of “What if . . .”

  13. Formulaic • Formula comedy, although predictable, is not limited in creativity. • It appeals to our predisposed patterns (archetypes) • Typical plot - young man wants woman, thwarted by opposition, twist of fate, and finally satisfaction

  14. Puppy dogs and roses • Often in comedy, everyone ends up being loved. • Those who are not loved are the figures that must leave the inclusive community.

  15. The History of Comedy

  16. Comic Ladder • Comedy of Ideas (high comedy) • Comedy of Manners (high comedy) • Farce (can be combination of high/low comedy) • Low Comedy

  17. The Comic Paradigm • The comic problem • The comic climax • The comic catastrophe • Comic education and change • Comic characters • Comic language

  18. Problem

  19. Climax

  20. Catastrophe

  21. Education and Change

  22. Comic Characters

  23. Language Monty Python determined that… vibraphone larch wankel rotary engine …had humor embedded in them.

  24. COMEDY THEORY from Richard F. Taflinger, Ph.D. • It must appeal to the intellect rather than the emotions • It must be mechanical (unadaptable, inflexible) • It must be inherently human, with the capability or reminding us of humanity • There must be a set of established societal norms familiar to the audience • The situation, actions, and dialogue must be inconsistent or unsuitable to the surroundings • It must be perceived by the observer as harmless or painless to the participants

  25. Appeal to the Intellect Satire is tragedy plus time. You give it enough time, the public, the reviewers will allow you to satirize it. Which is rather ridiculous, when you think about it. - Lenny Bruce

  26. Mechanical

  27. Inherently Human

  28. Established Societal Norms

  29. Inconsistent or Unsuitable

  30. Harmless or Painless

  31. The Importance of Being Earnestby Oscar Wilde

  32. The Importance of Being EarnestDevices of Farce

  33. Emily Levine’sTheory of Everything(@ 23 minutes) http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/emily_levine_s_theory_of_everything.html

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