Satire (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Satire" in English language version.

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  • Frye, Northrup (1957). Anatomy of Criticism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP. p. 222. ISBN 0-691-06004-5. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  • Wilson (2002) pp. 14–5, 20 and notes 25 (p. 308), 32 (p. 309)

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  • Claridge, Claudia (2010) Hyperbole in English: A Corpus-based Study of Exaggeration p.257
  • Kharpertian, Theodore D (1990). "Thomas Pynchon and Postmodern American Satire". In Kharpertian (ed.). A hand to turn the time: the Menippean satires of Thomas Pynchon. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. pp. 25–7. ISBN 9780838633618.
  • Petronius (1996), Satyrica, translated by Kinney; Branham, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-21118-6
  • Szabari, Antonia (October 23, 2009), Less Rightly Said: Scandals and Readers in Sixteenth-Century France, Stanford University Press, ISBN 978-0-8047-7354-6
  • Birberick; Ganim (2002), The Shape of Change: Essays in Early Modern Literature and La Fontaine in Honor of David Lee Rubin, Rodopi, ISBN 90-420-1449-0
  • Deloria, Vine (1969), "Indian humor", Custer Died For Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto, University of Oklahoma Press, p. 146, ISBN 9780806121291, Irony and satire provide much keener insights into a group's collective psyche and values than do years of [conventional] research as quoted in Ryan, Allan J (1999), The trickster shift: humour and irony in contemporary native art, UBC Press, p. 9, ISBN 9780774807043
  • Babcock, Barbara A. (1984), "Arrange Me Into Disorder: Fragments and Reflections on Ritual Clowning", in MacAloon (ed.), Rite, Drama, Festival, Spectacle. Also collected as Babcock, Barbara A Grimes (1996), Ronald, L (ed.), Readings in ritual studies, Prentice Hall, p. 5, ISBN 9780023472534, Harold Rosenberg has asserted that sociology needs to bring comedy into the foreground, including "an awareness of the comedy of sociology with its disguises", and, like Burke and Duncan, he has argued that comedy provides "the radical effect of self- knowledge which the anthropological bias excludes.
  • Willi, Andreas (2003), The Languages of Aristophanes: Aspects of Linguistic Variation in Classical Attic Greek, Oxford University Press, pp. 1–2, ISBN 9780199262649
  • Ehrenberg, Victor (1962), The people of Aristophanes: a sociology of old Attic comedy, p. 39
  • Bevere, Antonio and Cerri, Augusto (2006) Il Diritto di informazione e i diritti della persona pp.265–6 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine quotation:

    nella storia della nostra cultura, la satira ha realizzato il bisogno popolare di irridere e dissacrare il gotha politico ed economico, le cui reazioni punitive non sono certo state condizionate da critiche estetiche, ma dalla tolleranza o intolleranza caratterizzanti in quel momento storico la società e i suoi governanti. (...) la reale esistenza della satira in una società deriva, (...) dal margine di tolleranza espresso dai poteri punitivi dello Stato.

  • Amy Wiese Forbes (2010) The Satiric Decade: Satire and the Rise of Republicanism in France, 1830–1840 p.xv Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine, quotation:

    a critical public discourse (...) Satire rose the daunting question of what role public opinion would play in government. (...) satirists criticized government activities, exposed ambiguities, and forced administrators to clarify or establish policies. Not surprisingly, heated public controversy surrounded satiric commentary, resulting in an outright ban on political satire in 1835 (...) Government officials cracked down on their humorous public criticism that challenged state authority through both its form and content. Satire had been a political resource in France for a long time, but the anxious political context of the July Monarchy had unlocked its political power. Satire also taught lessons in democracy. It fit into the July Monarchy's tense political context as a voice in favor of public political debate. Satiric expression took place in the public sphere and spoke from a position of public opinion-that is, from a position of the nation's expressing a political voice and making claims on its government representatives and leadership. Beyond mere entertainment, satire's humor appealed to and exercised public opinion, drawing audiences into new practices of representative government.

  • Knight, Charles A. (2004) Literature of Satire p.254
  • Test (1991) p.9 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine quotation:

    A surprising variety of societies have allowed certain persons the freedom to mock other individuals and social institutions in rituals. From the earliest times the same freedom has been claimed by and granted to social groups at certain times of the year, as can be seen in such festivals as the Saturnalia, the Feast of Fools, Carnival, and similar folk festivals in India, nineteenth-century Newfoundland, and the ancient Mediterranean world.

  • Test (1991) pp.8–9
  • Birberick; Ganim (2002), The Shape of Change: Essays in Early Modern Literature and La Fontaine in Honor of David Lee Rubin, Rodopi, ISBN 90-420-1449-0
  • David Worcester (1968) The Art of Satire p.16
  • Eastman, Max (1936), "IV. Degrees of Biting", Enjoyment of Laughter, Transaction Publishers, pp. 236–43, ISBN 9781412822626 {{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  • Fo, Dario; Lorch, Jennifer (1997), Dario Fo, Manchester University Press, p. 128, ISBN 9780719038488, In other writings Fo makes an important distinction between sfottò and satire.
  • Arroyo, José Luís Blas; Casanova, Mónica Velando (2006), Discurso y sociedad: contribuciones al estudio de la lengua en... (in Spanish), vol. 1, Publicacions de la Universitat Jaume I, pp. 303–4, ISBN 9788480215381
  • Morson, Gary Saul (1988), Boundaries of Genre, Northwestern University Press, p. 114, ISBN 9780810108110, second, that parodies can be, as Bakhtin observes, "shallow" as well as "deep" (Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics, 160), which is to say, directed at superficial as well as fundamental faults of the original. [...] the distinction between shallow and deep [...] [is] helpful in understanding the complex ways in which parodies are used. For instance, shallow parody is sometimes used to pay an author an indirect compliment. The opposite of damning with faint praise, this parody with faint criticism may be designed to show that no more fundamental criticism could be made.
  • Kremer, S Lillian (2003), Holocaust Literature: Agosín to Lentin, Routledge, p. 100, ISBN 9780415929837
  • Clark (1991) pp.116–8 quotation:

    ...religion, politics, and sexuality are the primary stuff of literary satire. Among these sacret targets, matters costive and defecatory play an important part. ... from the earliest times, satirists have utilized scatological and bathroom humor. Aristophanes, always livid and nearly scandalous in his religious, political, and sexual references...

  • Clark, John R; Motto, Anna Lydia (1973), Satire–that blasted art, Putnam, p. 20, ISBN 9780399110597
  • Clark, John R; Motto, Anna Lydia (1980), "Menippeans & Their Satire: Concerning Monstrous Leamed Old Dogs and Hippocentaurs", Scholia Satyrica, 6 (3/4): 45, [Chapple's book Soviet satire of the twenties]... classifying the very topics his satirists satirized: housing, food, and fuel supplies, poverty, inflation, "hooliganism", public services, religion, stereotypes of nationals (the Englishman, German, &c), &c. Yet the truth of the matter is that no satirist worth his salt (Petronius, Chaucer, Rabelais, Swift, Leskov, Grass) ever avoids man's habits and living standards, or scants those delicate desiderata: religion, politics, and sex.
  • Ferdie Addis (2012) Qual è il tuo "tallone da killer"? p.20
  • Hodgart (2009) ch 2 The topics of satire: politics p.33 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine

    The most pressing of the problems that face us when we close the book or leave the theatre are ultimately political ones; and so politics is the pre-eminent topic of satire. ...to some degree public affairs vex every man, if he pays taxes, does military service or even objects to the way his neighbour is behaving. There is no escape from politics where more than a dozen people are living together.
    There is an essential connection between satire and politics in the widest sense: satire is not only the commonest form of political literature, but, insofar as it tries to influence public behaviours, it is the most political part of all literature.

  • Hodgart (2009) p.39
  • Duprat, Annie (1982) La dégradation de l'image royale dans la caricature révolutionnaire p.178 quotation:

    Le corps grotesque est una realite populaire detournee au profit d'une representation du corps a but politique, plaquege du corps scatologique sur le corps de ceux qu'il covient de denoncer. Denonciation scatologique projetee sur le corps aristocratique pour lui signifier sa degenerescence.

  • Hyers, M. Conrad (1996) [1996]. The Spirituality of Comedy: comic heroism in a tragic world. Transaction Publishers. p. 145. ISBN 1-56000-218-2.
  • Donald Alexander Mackenzie (1923) Myths of Pre-Columbian America p.229
  • Patrick Marnham (2000) Dreaming with His Eyes Open: A Life of Diego Rivera p.297
  • Hilda Ellis Davidson (1993) Boundaries & Thresholds p.85 quotation:

    It is this fear of what the dead in their uncontrollable power might cause which has brought forth apotropaic rites, protective rites against the dead. (...) One of these popular rites was the funeral rite of sin-eating, performed by a sin-eater, a man or woman. Through accepting the food and drink provided, he took upon himself the sins of the departed.

  • Bloom, Edward Alan; Bloom, Lillian D. (1979), Satire's persuasive voice, Cornell University Press, ISBN 9780801408397.[page needed]
  • Nicoll, Allardyce (1951), British drama: an historical survey from the beginnings to the present time, p. 179
  • Hodgart (2009) p.189
  • Pollard, Arthur (1970), "4. Tones", Satire, p. 66
  • Wilson 2002, p. 17. Wilson, R Rawdon (2002), The hydra's tale: imagining disgust, University of Alberta, ISBN 9780888643681.
  • Weinbrot, Howard D. (2007) Eighteenth-Century Satire: Essays on Text and Context from Dryden to Peter... p.136
  • Charles Press (1981). The Political Cartoon. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 34. ISBN 9780838619018.
  • Sullivan, James (2010) Seven Dirty Words: The Life and Crimes of George Carlin p.94
  • Deumert, Ana (2014). Sociolinguistics and Mobile Communication. Edinburgh University Press. p. 181. ISBN 9780748655779. Retrieved June 12, 2017..
  • Griffin, Dustin H. (1994) Satire: A Critical Reintroduction p.136
  • Geisler, Michael E. (2005) National Symbols, Fractured Identities: Contesting the National Narrative p.73
  • Pezzella, Vincenzo (2009) La diffamazione: responsabilità penale e civile pp.566–7 quotation:

    Il diritto di satira trova il suo fondamento negli artt. 21 e 33 della Costituzione che tutelano, rispettivamente, la libertà di manifestazione del pensiero e quella di elaborazione artistica e scientifica. (...) la satira, in quanto operante nell'ambito di ciò che è arte, non è strettamente correlata ad esigenze informative, dal che deriva che i suoi limiti di liveità siano ben più ammpi di quelli propri del diritto di cronaca

  • Kinservik, Matthew J. (2002) Disciplining Satire: The Censorship of Satiric Comedy on the Eighteenth... p.21
  • Test (1991) p.10
  • Leonard, James S; Tenney, Thomas A; Davis, Thadious M (December 1992). Satire or Evasion?: Black Perspectives on Huckleberry Finn. Duke University Press. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-8223-1174-4.
  • Sutherland, James (1958), English Satire
  • Martin, Rod A (2007), The Psychology of Humor: An Integrative Approach, Elsevier, pp. 27–8, ISBN 9780080465999
  • Apte, Mahadev L (1985), "Introduction", Humor and laughter: an anthropological approach, Cornell University Press, p. 23, ISBN 9780801493072, The general neglect of humor as a topic of anthropological research is reflected in teaching practice. Most introductory textbooks do not even list humor as a significant characteristic of cultural systems together with kinship, social roles, behavioral patterns, religion, language, economic transactions, political institutions, values, and material culture.

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  • Coppola, Jo (1958), "An Angry Young Magazine ...", The Realist (1), Good comedy is social criticism—although you might find that hard to believe if all you ever saw were some of the so-called clowns of videoland.... Comedy is dying today because criticism is on its deathbed... because telecasters, frightened by the threats and pressure of sponsors, blacklists and viewers, helped introduce conformity to this age... In such a climate, comedy cannot flourish. For comedy is, after all, a look at ourselves, not as we pretend to be when we look in the mirror of our imagination, but as we really are. Look at the comedy of any age and you will know volumes about that period and its people which neither historian nor anthropologist can tell you.

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  • Luttazzi, Daniele (October 2003), Fracassi, Federica; Guerriero, Jacopo (eds.), "State a casa a fare i compiti" (interview), Nazione Indiana (in Italian), Lo sfottò è reazionario. Non cambia le carte in tavola, anzi, rende simpatica la persona presa di mira. La Russa, oggi, è quel personaggio simpatico, con la voce cavernosa, il doppiatore dei Simpson di cui Fiorello fa l'imitazione. Nessuno ricorda più il La Russa picchiatore fascista. Nessuno ricorda gli atti fascisti e reazionari di questo governo in televisione.

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  • Ullman, B. L. (1913). "Satura and Satire". Classical Philology. 8 (2): 172–194. doi:10.1086/359771. S2CID 161191881. Archived from the original on May 5, 2021.
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  • Bevere, Antonio and Cerri, Augusto (2006) Il Diritto di informazione e i diritti della persona pp.265–6 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine quotation:

    nella storia della nostra cultura, la satira ha realizzato il bisogno popolare di irridere e dissacrare il gotha politico ed economico, le cui reazioni punitive non sono certo state condizionate da critiche estetiche, ma dalla tolleranza o intolleranza caratterizzanti in quel momento storico la società e i suoi governanti. (...) la reale esistenza della satira in una società deriva, (...) dal margine di tolleranza espresso dai poteri punitivi dello Stato.

  • Amy Wiese Forbes (2010) The Satiric Decade: Satire and the Rise of Republicanism in France, 1830–1840 p.xv Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine, quotation:

    a critical public discourse (...) Satire rose the daunting question of what role public opinion would play in government. (...) satirists criticized government activities, exposed ambiguities, and forced administrators to clarify or establish policies. Not surprisingly, heated public controversy surrounded satiric commentary, resulting in an outright ban on political satire in 1835 (...) Government officials cracked down on their humorous public criticism that challenged state authority through both its form and content. Satire had been a political resource in France for a long time, but the anxious political context of the July Monarchy had unlocked its political power. Satire also taught lessons in democracy. It fit into the July Monarchy's tense political context as a voice in favor of public political debate. Satiric expression took place in the public sphere and spoke from a position of public opinion-that is, from a position of the nation's expressing a political voice and making claims on its government representatives and leadership. Beyond mere entertainment, satire's humor appealed to and exercised public opinion, drawing audiences into new practices of representative government.

  • Test (1991) p.9 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine quotation:

    A surprising variety of societies have allowed certain persons the freedom to mock other individuals and social institutions in rituals. From the earliest times the same freedom has been claimed by and granted to social groups at certain times of the year, as can be seen in such festivals as the Saturnalia, the Feast of Fools, Carnival, and similar folk festivals in India, nineteenth-century Newfoundland, and the ancient Mediterranean world.

  • Luttazzi, Daniele (2005), Matrix, IT, archived from the original on December 25, 2005, Dario Fo disse a Satyricon: —La satira vera si vede dalla reazione che suscita.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Hodgart (2009) ch 2 The topics of satire: politics p.33 Archived November 22, 2022, at the Wayback Machine

    The most pressing of the problems that face us when we close the book or leave the theatre are ultimately political ones; and so politics is the pre-eminent topic of satire. ...to some degree public affairs vex every man, if he pays taxes, does military service or even objects to the way his neighbour is behaving. There is no escape from politics where more than a dozen people are living together.
    There is an essential connection between satire and politics in the widest sense: satire is not only the commonest form of political literature, but, insofar as it tries to influence public behaviours, it is the most political part of all literature.

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