This new edition of Andrew Stott’s Comedy builds on themes presented in the first edition such as focusing on the significance of comic 'events' through study of various theoretical methodologies, including deconstruction, psychoanalysis and gender theory, and provides case studies of a number of themes, ranging from the drag act to the simplicity of slipping on a banana skin. This new edition Written in a clear and accessible style, this book is ideal introduction to comedy for students studying literature and culture.
I was looking for a book as to why we laugh and why we find certain things funny ; the reviews mentioned that the book covered Freud's theories of humour, as well as certain other philosophical views of humour and laughter. While these were indeed present, they were in short supply ; rather, there was a slightly academic discussion of comedy considered as a dramatic category, plus a reading of common comedic tropes through some sort of a critical theory paradigm. All in all, it was a little obtuse and not exactly what I was looking for, but there were more than enough sections (especially the last chapter) to justify the book.
Solid critical introduction to the theory and practice of comedy starting from Plato and Aristotle. Includes a good discussion of Bakhtin's ideas about carnival and Begson's elan vital. Stott takes up comic identity, gender and sexuality, the body, politics, and laughter. The glossary, bibliography, and index are adequate, but not terribly comprehensive.