Laughter, Literature, Violence, 1840–1930

Laughter, Literature, Violence, 1840–1930

  • Jonathan Taylor
Publisher:SpringerISBN 13: 9783030114138ISBN 10: 3030114139

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Laughter, Literature, Violence, 1840–1930 is written by Jonathan Taylor and published by Springer. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 3030114139 (ISBN 10) and 9783030114138 (ISBN 13).

Laughter, Literature, Violence, 1840-1930 investigates the strange, complex, even paradoxical relationship between laughter, on the one hand, and violence, war, horror, death, on the other. It does so in relation to philosophy, politics, and key nineteenth- and twentieth-century literary texts, by Edgar Allan Poe, Edmund Gosse, Wyndham Lewis and Katherine Mansfield – texts which explore the far reaches of Schadenfreude, and so-called ‘superiority theories’ of laughter, pushing these theories to breaking point. In these literary texts, the violent superiority often ascribed to laughter is seen as radically unstable, co-existing with its opposite: an anarchic sense of equality. Laughter, humour and comedy are slippery, duplicitous, ambivalent, self-contradictory hybrids, fusing apparently discordant elements. Now and then, though, literary and philosophical texts also dream of a different kind of laughter, one which reaches beyond its alloys –a transcendent, ‘perfect’ laughter which exists only in and for itself.