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THE BURLESQUE, T H E PA R O D I C A N D T H E S AT I R I C I N M E D I E VA L A N D E A R LY M ODE R N S PA I N G u e s t E d ito r FR A NK A. THE BURLESQUE, THE PA R O D I C A N D T H E S A T I R I C : A b R i E F p R E FAc E Frank A. Domínguez U N i v E R si t y O F N O Rt h c A R O l i NA At c hA p E l h i l l the burlesque, defined in the broadest way possible, is associated with parody and satire, and displays ample amounts of irony or sarcasm, exaggeration, double entendre, and strange comparisons or analogies. Modes of the burlesque have always received considerable critical attention from medievalists and early modernists; however, since the 1970s they have been studied in a more comprehensive way by scholars like Mihail bakhtin, who believed that the burlesque resulted
La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures – La corónica: Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures & Culture
Published: Dec 24, 2009
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