ABSTRACT

In contrast to the vernacular literary traditions of France, Italy and England, comic tales in verse flourished in late medieval Germany, providing bawdy entertainment for larger audiences of public recitals as well as for smaller numbers of individual readers. In a sustained close analysis Sebastian Coxon explores both the narrative design and fundamental thematic preoccupations of these short texts. A distinctively performative tradition of pre-modern narrative literature emerges which invited its recipients to think, learn and above all to laugh in a number of different ways.

chapter 1|32 pages

Introduction: Laughter and Narrative

part I|50 pages

Laughter

chapter 2|24 pages

Laughing at Comic Tales

chapter 3|25 pages

Laughter in Comic Tales

section II|48 pages

Narrative Design

chapter 4|24 pages

Time and Space

chapter 5|23 pages

Speech and Dialogue

section III|55 pages

Thematic Content

chapter 6|23 pages

The Physical Body

chapter 7|22 pages

The Social Body