Description

Book Synopsis
This book attempts an innovative exploration of the connection between humour and scepticism in the English literary canon. Defining humour as a capability, or better put, as a dunamis, it looks into its ’energeiac‘ forms of actualisation in the English literary imagination from Chaucer to Sterne. Refraining from attributing an essentialist tone and mode to the theoretical and critical reception of English humour, and also humour in a wider context, it works instead within a literary nominalist framework where it is explored as a literary phenomenon that sides with the living, the multifarious, and the experiential dimensions of human action. In doing so, it develops a broader argument concerning the nominalist overtones of English humour where its prominent scepticism purports an epistemological break with the dominant forces of universalism; an argumentative force which cyclically acquires its tenets from the preliminary discussion that focuses on the dynamicism of humour.

Table of Contents

English literature, Chaucer and Ockhamism, Jonson’s Hobbesianism, Sternean anti-rationalism, humour and nominalism, epistemic doubt.

Doubtful Fictions: The Scepticism of Humour in

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    A Hardback by Selena Özbas

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      View other formats and editions of Doubtful Fictions: The Scepticism of Humour in by Selena Özbas

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 31/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9783631901243, 978-3631901243
      ISBN10: 3631901240

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book attempts an innovative exploration of the connection between humour and scepticism in the English literary canon. Defining humour as a capability, or better put, as a dunamis, it looks into its ’energeiac‘ forms of actualisation in the English literary imagination from Chaucer to Sterne. Refraining from attributing an essentialist tone and mode to the theoretical and critical reception of English humour, and also humour in a wider context, it works instead within a literary nominalist framework where it is explored as a literary phenomenon that sides with the living, the multifarious, and the experiential dimensions of human action. In doing so, it develops a broader argument concerning the nominalist overtones of English humour where its prominent scepticism purports an epistemological break with the dominant forces of universalism; an argumentative force which cyclically acquires its tenets from the preliminary discussion that focuses on the dynamicism of humour.

      Table of Contents

      English literature, Chaucer and Ockhamism, Jonson’s Hobbesianism, Sternean anti-rationalism, humour and nominalism, epistemic doubt.

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