Humor in British Literature, From the Middle Ages to the Restoration: A Reference Guide
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
28th February 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: general
Reference works
827.009
Hardback
256
Humour began in British literature when Chaucer developed the storytelling tradition along with the ironies that resulted from the juxtaposition of people from different classes and points of view. Shakespeare later developed vernacular and street humour in his comedies, festive humour in his romances and histories, and dark humour in his tragedies. During the Restoration, Congreve established the Comedy of Manners. This book overviews scholarship in humour in British literature from the Middle Ages through the 17th century. The volume begins with an introductory essay on the origins of British humour in the Middle Ages. Chapters then examine British literary humour during particular centuries. Each chapter begins with an overview of humour during that time period. Entries for individual authors follow, with each entry discussing the role of humour in the author's work and providing a bibliography of modern studies. Entries are arranged chronologically to show the development of humour over time, while an index allows alphabetical access to individual authors.
.,."this book...is informative and stimulating. As a source for future work it should become a citation classic."-Humor
...this book...is informative and stimulating. As a source for future work it should become a citation classic.-Humor
Humor in British Literatureis useful as a starter point in humor studies. It brings together otherwise scattered resources on a somewhat underappreciated field of study.-The Scriblerian
Nilsen's work, surveying humor in British literature from the 14th through the 17th centuries, is scholarly and exhaustive. Combining formidable scholarship with extensive bibliographical references, Nilsen presents material chronologically by the author's year of birth.... Strongly recommended for upper-division undergraduates, graduates, researchers, and bibliographers, as well as academic and research libraries.-Choice
..."this book...is informative and stimulating. As a source for future work it should become a citation classic."-Humor
"Humor in British Literatureis useful as a starter point in humor studies. It brings together otherwise scattered resources on a somewhat underappreciated field of study."-The Scriblerian
"Nilsen's work, surveying humor in British literature from the 14th through the 17th centuries, is scholarly and exhaustive. Combining formidable scholarship with extensive bibliographical references, Nilsen presents material chronologically by the author's year of birth.... Strongly recommended for upper-division undergraduates, graduates, researchers, and bibliographers, as well as academic and research libraries."-Choice
DON L. F. NILSEN is Professor of English Linguistics at Arizona State University and Executive Secretary of the International Society for Humor Studies. His previous books include Humor Scholarship: A Research Bibliography (Greenwood, 1993) and Humor in Irish Literature: A Research Guide (Greenwood, 1996).