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(2005) Narrative, perception, language, and faith, Dordrecht, Springer.

The story

Edmond Wright

pp. 43-69

It was said some time ago by a writer on irony, G. G. Sedgwick, that "the comic is composed of just such elements…as are found in many a tragic situation" (Sedgwick, 1967: 26). A linguist with a primary interest in humour, Salvatore Attardo, has noted the similarity between jokes and humorous stories (Attardo, 1994: 254–70). The claim in this book is that all stories without exception — tragic, comic, tragi-comic, plotless, absurd, tragical-historical-comical-pastoral — all correspond to the Joke structure we observed in Chapter 1. This is a large claim, often denied, but, proceeding with the step-by-step approach adopted so far, let us see if we can establish its credibility.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230506299_2

Full citation:

Wright, E. (2005). The story, in Narrative, perception, language, and faith, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 43-69.

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