Bookbot

Shaun Regan

    Tragicomedy
    Making the Novel
    Laurence Sterne's a Sentimental Journey: A Legacy to the World
    • The collection offers fresh critical perspectives on Laurence Sterne's A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy, highlighting its accessibility compared to Tristram Shandy. It includes an introduction that contextualizes each essay within the novel's reception history, along with a tailpiece discussing Sterne's career and death. This volume aims to fill the gap in critical analysis for students and scholars, providing a cohesive and insightful exploration of this significant literary work.

      Laurence Sterne's a Sentimental Journey: A Legacy to the World
    • Making the Novel

      Fiction and Society in Britain. 1660-1789

      This book advances a new cultural reading of the formation of the British novel. Rejecting a teleological narrative of the genre's 'rise' and through close analysis of key texts, the authors present a dynamic picture of the emergence of the novel, which focuses upon formal innovation, social engagement, and artistic and commercial competition.

      Making the Novel
    • This succinct authoritative book offers readers an overview of the origins, characteristics, and changing status of tragicomedy from the 17th century to the present. It explores the work of some of the key English and Irish playwrights associated with the form, the influence of Italian and Spanish theorist-playwrights and the importance of translations of Pierre Corneille's Le Cid. At the turn of the 17th century, English dramatists such as John Marston, John Fletcher, and William Shakespeare began experimenting with plays that mixed elements of tragedy and comedy, producing a blended mode that they themselves called 'tragicomedy'. This book begins by examining the sources of their inspiration and the theatrical achievement that they hoped to gain by confronting an audience with plays that defied the plot and character expectations of 'pure' comedy and tragedy. It goes on to show how, reacting to French models, John Dryden, Shakespeare 'improvers' and other English playwrights developed the form while sowing the seeds of its own vulnerability to parody and obsolescence in the eighteenth century. Discussing nineteenth-century melodrama as in some respects a resurrection of tragicomedy, the final chapter concentrates on plays by Ibsen, Chekhov, and Beckett as examples of the form being revived to create theatrical modes that more adequately represent the perceived complexity of experience.

      Tragicomedy