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A Theory of Parody: The Teachings of Twentieth-Century Art Forms

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TLDR
The authors examines the historical development of parody in order to examine its place, purpose and practice in the post-modern world of contemporary art forms, and examines its place and purpose in satire.
Abstract
Examines the historical development of parody in order to examine its place, purpose and practice in the postmodern world of contemporary artforms.

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Book ChapterDOI

Schlusswort: Parodie als Fälschung

TL;DR: In this paper, Roidis setzte den Anfangsakzent mit einer Parodie des weiblichen Schreibens, die bestrebt war, durch die Ironisierung von Schriftstellerinnen die mannliche erzahlerische Norm zu erhalten.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender, Humour and Transgression in Canadian Women’s Theatre

TL;DR: The authors investigates humour's complicated and volatile relationship to gender and the way the laughing body of women on stage presents a fascinating double helix of sexual aggression and power, and concludes that humour is no simple matter for women, due to the legacy of profoundly polarized and hyper-sexualized historical ambivalence between femininity and laughter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural and Textual Encounters in Gavin Bishop’s The House that Jack Built , a New Zealand Picture Book

TL;DR: The House that Jack Built by multi-award winning author-illustrator, Gavin Bishop, is one of New Zealand's most sophisticated picture books for children as discussed by the authors, and it depicts the colonisation of new Zealand from 1798 to around 1845, and the beginning of the New Zealand Wars between Māori and Pākehā over land.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bugs Bunny, Morpheus, Calaf e carros voadores: da literacia operática atual: publicidade e novos media

TL;DR: In this article, an exploratory inquiry about the relevance of the circulation of audiovisual ads to the formation of today's operatic literacy is made. But it is focused on the process of invention of what is currently understood as opera and its significance in the present social landscape.