I. Folk Humor
II. laughter, praise and abuse
III. Banquet
I. folk humour (Ch 17)
A. in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance; offering a description
of its original traits (195)
1. carnival festivities and the comic spectacles
and the life of medieval people are connected (196)
2. atmosphere: comic aspect as clowns and fools, celebration
B. constitutes a second reality outside the official realm; it is
complex system of meaning existing alongside and in opposition to
the ‘authoritarian word' of dominant orthodoxy (194)
1. opposite to the serious official,
ecclesiastical, feudal, and political cut from and ceremonials (197)
2. outside the church and religiosity
3. culture of the marketplace
4. law of its own freedom (198)
C. three arenas of particular significance in the development of
life and folk culture
1. carnival laughter
a. human culture; human existence as the primary
form; an essential, meaningful philosophical content
b. time
i. linked to moments of crisis, of breaking points
in the cycle of nature or in the life of society and man; natural
(cosmic ) cycle
ii. the utopian realm of community, freedom, equality, and
abundance(199)
c. complex nature of carnival laughter (200)
class="style8">i. festive laughter: laughter of
all people
ii. universal in scope; it is directed at all and everyone,
including the carnival's participants
iii. ambivalent: it is gay, triumphant, and at the same time
mocking, deriding
2. the realm of parodic literature (201)
a. celebration
b. the Latin parody or semiparody was widespread
3. the language of the market-place (203)
a. a temporary suspension; a new type of
communication always creates new forms of speech or a new meaning
given to the old forms
b. abuses; ambivalent; profanities and oaths (204)
c. images of the human body-food,
drink, defecation, and sexual life-plays
a dominant role |
d. grotesque realism; material bodily principle-universal,
representing all the people
e. bodily life are fertility, growth, and a brimming-over abundance
f. degradation-the lowering of all
that is high, spiritual, ideal, abstract; it is a transfer to the
material level,...
-coming down to earth, the contact with
earth as an element that swallows up and gives birth at the same
time
TOP
II. laughter, praise and abuse (Ch 18)
A. official seriousness and the unofficial world
1. laughter was eliminated from religious cult,
from feudal and state ceremonials, etiquette, and from all the genre
of high speculation
2. universalism and freedom
3. people's unofficial truth; laughter overcomes fear, violence and
authority; transformation
4. social consciousness of all the people
B. colloquial language of praise and abuse (212)
1. human body and physical function; lower
stratum; debase, destroy, regenerate (212)
2. marketplace as the center of the unofficial (213)
3. double image; upper and lower stratum; praise and abuse are the
two sides of the same coin (216)
4. special intonations; distinct verbal and musical imagery (218)
5. intrinsic value (ex. food and kitchen) (219)
C. market-place images of food and body
1. abuse is followed by praise;
they are two aspects of one world, each with its own body (224)
2. the process of becoming (224)
3. people as a whole, but organized in their own way, they way of
the people; unity of time (225)
4. fear and limitation disappear (226)
TOP
III. Banquet
living actuality of bodily life, provides a way or experiencing
and understanding human existence which frees consciousness from the
grip of religious and cosmic fears
A. banquet image
1. universalism, essential relation to life,
death, struggle, triumph, and regeneration (229)
2. absolutely fearless and gay truth (231)
3. single two-faced image; abundance and rebirth (232)
4. terror is conquered by laughter (238)
B. underworld
1. hell is a banquet and a gay carnival (241)
2. a new model was being constructed in which the leading role was
transferred to the horizontal lines, to the movement forward in real
space and historical time (243)
3. the real being outside all hierarchical norms and values
TOP
Questions
1. As far as we consider carnival as an utopian idea, how can we
relate chronotope with it? While we consider that the social element
as an important feature of chronotope, carnival is ideal. Can
Bakhtin's concept of carnival and chronotope cover all the aspects
in reality and art?
2. The relation between banquet and underworld is quite striking
and even subversive to the traditional concept of religion. Can it
serve as a recycle of life? Will it be possible that we are able to
free from the fear of the traditional concept of underworld? In
other words, can human beings really free themselves from the
tradition and the society?
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