General Comedy Flashcards

1
Q

What is ‘Farce’?

A

A form of comedy that emphasises the ridiculous.

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2
Q

What comedies were essentially farce?

A

Late Greek and Roman comedies were essentially farce.

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3
Q

Features of Farce

A
  • Disguise, misunderstandings and mistaken identities
  • Slapstick comedy
  • Fast-paced action with people entering and leaving suddenly, chasing each other.
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4
Q

What were essential features of Shakespeare’s first comedies?

A

Relied heavily on farce; his first comedy “The Errors of Comedy”

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5
Q

How did Shakespeare’s comedic style change?

A

His second comedy - “The Taming of The Shrew”- marks a shift to gentler comedy which is less concerned with raw laughter.

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6
Q

What were the majority of Shakespeare’s comedies like after the shift?

A

All comedies after “The Taming of The Shrew’ retain this new, gentler comedy.

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7
Q

What was the main focus of Shakespeare’s comedies?

A

Love increasingly becomes the driving force in Shakespeare’s comedies; his later comedies focus on the realisation of love.

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8
Q

In terms of his comedy, what is Shakespeare known for?

A

His romantic comedies- comedy that focuses humorously, and more gently than farce, on love and relationships.

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9
Q

What is ‘The Comedy of Manners’ and when was it created?

A
  • A new sub-genre of comedy satrising and celebrating the upper classes.
  • After 1660 in England.
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10
Q

Features of ‘The Comedy of Manners’

A
  • Celebrates wit of upper classes and their attitudes + behaviours whilst also satirising them
  • Focuses on love affairs of upper class
  • Celebrates flamboyance and sophistication of uppers
  • Lots of farce
  • Sophistication of city vs. dull simplicity of country
  • Tension between public and private behaviours + attitudes
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11
Q

When did ‘The Comedy of Manners’ begin to become less popular?

A

The early 20th century.

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12
Q

What is ‘The Well-made play’ and when was it created?

A

The ‘Comedy of Manners’ revived in the late 19th century.

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13
Q

What type of structure does ‘The Well-made Play’ have?

A

A tight structure, e.g.:

  • Series of relevant events of past that become relevant at end of play
  • Discoveries brought about by newly found letters/set of papers that explain many missing details
  • 1 or more of main characters discover they aren’t who they thought they were.
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14
Q

What was ‘A E S T H E T I C I S M’?

A

Artistic and intellectual movement 19th century that believed there should be no relationship between art and morality: ‘Art for art’s sake’.

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15
Q

How does the aesthetic movement relate back to Oscar Wilde and ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’?

A
  • Oscar Wilde = heavily influenced by aestheticism.

- Makes meaning of ‘Earnest’ controversial: Does it even have a meaning?

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16
Q

What did the aesthetic movement want to escape?

A
  • The stifling, inflexible Victorian emphasis on morality.

- The ugliness and materialism of Industrial Rev.

17
Q

What is ‘unity of time’?

A

Events occur in quick succession in a short timespan. Comes from Roman Comedy.

18
Q

What is ‘unity of place’?

A

Single domestic setting. From Roman Comedy