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The alluring problem : an essay on irony / D. J. Enright.

Van Pelt Library PN56.I65 E57 1986
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LIBRA - Rare PN56.I65 E57 1986 Potok copy
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Enright, D. J. (Dennis Joseph), 1920-2002.
Contributor:
The Library of Chaim Potok (University of Pennsylvania)
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Irony in literature.
Penn Provenance:
Potok, Adena (donor) (Potok Collection copy)
Physical Description:
vii pages, 1 unnumbered page, 178 pages, 6 unnumbered pages ; 22 cm
Place of Publication:
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1986.
Summary:
When Jonathan Swift suggested in 1729, in his pamphlet A Modest Proposal, that the Irish might survive overpopulation if only they could be persuaded to eat their own babies, the Irishman was employing that favorite tool of writers and wits: irony. Now, in an entertaining and intriguing new book, D. J. Enright, acclaimed editor of The Oxford Book of Death, has turned his attention to the practice of irony and its many manifestations in both literature and life. Aiming to pursue personal ironies, both verbal and situational, Enright has observed their twists and turns in his own inimitable style. The author takes a fresh look at irony in the works of Shakespeare, Austen, James, Proust and Freud, and a briefer look at such conspicous practitioners as Swift, Fielding and Hardy. He goes on to review the use of irony, or what resembles it, in the works of Pope, Dickens, Conrad, Brecht and other more recent writers. Religion, politics, censorship, love and death are all mined for their rich lode of ironic situations. Among other themes discussed are the perils of irony unrecognised and irony wrongly presumed; the risks run by self-ironists; and the questions "Does romantic irony exist?" and "Must irony have a victim? Can it be sweet?". Enright's reflections vary from musings on the absurdities of acronyms like AIDS and CREEP to a consideration of the apparent absence of irony in China. Although irony commonly generates laughter, some have observed that it can be no laughing matter. But the author concludes this witty and elegant book by noting that, "while irony is an ambiguous gift... it is a gift all the same."
Contents:
Definitions?
The unexamined life not worth living: Kierkegaard, Socrates, Pascal
Romantic irony
Milosz and the case against
Situational
Anatomy of an irony
Ironic or not?
Or only funny and sad?
Ironies which aren't
What the Bible tells us
The fortunes of Faust
Shakespearian
Swift, Fielding, and bad taste
Pope, grass, and dogs
Northanger Abbey and the double take
Hardy perennial
Jamesian
Proustian
Freud and the conservation of energy
Politics
Censorship
Trade ironies
Love and death
Sarcasm, the mighty brought low, the last laugh
Chinese
Negative freedom
Must irony have a victim? Can it be sweet?
Conclusion.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-174) and index.
Local Notes:
Potok Collection copy presented to the Penn Libraries by Adena Potok.
Potok Collection copy has underlines and marginal marks.
ISBN:
0192122533 :
OCLC:
13329019

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