Funny Ha Ha and Funny Peculiar
Title | Funny Ha Ha and Funny Peculiar PDF eBook |
Author | Denys Parsons |
Publisher | |
Pages | 157 |
Release | 1969 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Funny Ha Ha, Funny Peculiar
Title | Funny Ha Ha, Funny Peculiar PDF eBook |
Author | Ed Teacher |
Publisher | |
Pages | 125 |
Release | 1991 |
Genre | Curiosities and wonders |
ISBN | 9780340541616 |
Funny Peculiar, Funny Ha-Ha
Title | Funny Peculiar, Funny Ha-Ha PDF eBook |
Author | Glenda Palmer-Vibert |
Publisher | |
Pages | 41 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Humorous poetry, English |
ISBN | 9781780350288 |
Glenda Vibert shares her thoughts on a wider range of life's experiences: childhood and age, love and loss, joy and suffering. All are treated with wit and pathos and demonstrate the poet's warmth, insight and startling talent for the mot juste, the telling phrase, which leaps out at the reader and embeds itself in his memory.
Funny Ha, Ha
Title | Funny Ha, Ha PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 656 |
Release | 2021-12-09 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9781800249684 |
Funny Ha Ha
Title | Funny Ha Ha PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 47 |
Release | 2016 |
Genre | Artists' books |
ISBN |
Funny Ha-Ha, Funny Peculiar
Title | Funny Ha-Ha, Funny Peculiar PDF eBook |
Author | Neil Astley |
Publisher | Bloodaxe Books Limited |
Pages | 192 |
Release | 2015 |
Genre | Humor |
ISBN | 9781852249618 |
This lively anthology brings together two kinds of funny: humorous poems that make you laugh or smile (funny ha-ha), and strange, surreal, witty or plain weird poems (funny peculiar). There has always been a tradition of comic and curious verse in English poetry, but in contemporary poetry the peculiar has come into its own, as this surprising selection shows. Presented in a hardback version of the giftbook format used for other shorter Bloodaxe anthologies aimed at a popular readership, Funny Ha-Ha, Funny Peculiar covers a wide variety of highly entertaining or provocatively engaging poets.
Funny Peculiar
Title | Funny Peculiar PDF eBook |
Author | Mikita Brottman |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 201 |
Release | 2013-04-15 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 1135890803 |
Why are jokes funny? Why do we laugh? In Funny Peculiar, Mikita Brottman demurs from recent scholarship that takes laughter-- and the broader domain of humor and the comical--as a liberating social force and an endearing aspect of self-expression. For Brottman, there is nothing funny about laughter, which is less connected to mirth and feelings of good will than to a nexus of darker emotions: fear, aggression, shame, anxiety. Brottman rethinks not only the mechanisms of humor but also the relation of humor to the body and the senses. To this end, she provides an engrossing account of the life and work of Gershon Legman, exiled author, publisher, and sexologist, Alfred Kinsey's first bibliographer, and legendary compiler of the dirty joke. Like Freud, Legman was convinced of the impossibility of understanding humor apart from sex, and Brottman shows how his two massive works on the subject, Rationale of the Dirty Joke and No Laughing Matter, provide a framework for understanding the ambivalent and often hostile impulses that underlie the comic impulse in its various guises. In lively and enlivening chapters, she traverses dirty jokes, the figure of the "evil clown" in popular culture, the current popularity of "humor therapy," changing fashions in stand-up comedy, and the connection between humor and horror. Brottman's sparkling prose, laced with wit, does not obscure the seriousness of Funny Peculiar. It is a thoughtful and wide-ranging elaboration of the Freudian claim that joking, in point of fact, is no laughing matter.