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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!eff!mnemonic
- From: mnemonic@eff.org (Mike Godwin)
- Subject: Re: Non-rabelaisian farts
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.154053.5439@eff.org>
- Originator: mnemonic@eff.org
- Sender: usenet@eff.org (NNTP News Poster)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: eff.org
- Organization: Electronic Frontier Foundation
- References: <1hl902INNmi3@morrow.stanford.edu> <1992Dec27.234711.1844@eff.org> <BzyK2y.8wz@news.iastate.edu>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 15:40:53 GMT
- Lines: 43
-
- In article <BzyK2y.8wz@news.iastate.edu> s1mbm@isuvax.iastate.edu writes:
-
- >Mike, I'm growing weary of the sheer nonspecificity of your posts on this
- >subject.
-
- Does this mean you admire my specificity in other subjects?
-
- >The humor of "The Miller's Tale," for instance is not "grounded"
- >in farts, even though Alison's fart is one of the central *events* of the
- >tale.
-
- I disagree. It's *the* central event, and the one you can count on
- students to remember if they remember "The Miller's Tale" at all.
-
- >Finally, you might consider
- >that the *greater* humor of the story rests not with the simple letting
- >loose of a fart in the face, but in its exposure of the folly that
- >forever follows human pretention.
-
- Rabelais has larger points to make, too. That's not the issue here.
-
- Thanks for your analysis of the Miller's Tale, but it's inapposite in a
- thread that started with my one small comment about the word "Rabelaisian"
- in reference to fart humor.
-
- What I found more helpful were the examples folks gave of stories in which
- the farting incident was distinctly non-Rabelaisian (or non-Chaucerian, if you
- prefer): I recall at least two examples in which the bodily function is
- linked primarily with shame rather than humor.
-
- It is a source of pleasure to me that you know Chaucer, and I want to
- thank you again for sharing that with us.
-
-
- --Mike
-
-
-
- --
- Mike Godwin, |"I'm waiting for the one-man revolution
- mnemonic@eff.org| The only one that's coming."
- (617) 864-0665 |
- EFF, Cambridge | --Robert Frost
-