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Logic and Humour in the Fabliaux
An Essay in Applied Narratology
Roy J. Pearcy

Joseph Bédier's 1893 definition of the fabliaux as 'funny stories in verse' is still widely accepted as the best brief and general description for a heterogeneous collection of texts. But the heterogeneity creates difficulties and at the periphery of the canon all three of the criteria included in Bédier's definition are open to question. The inventory proposed in the current study is based on a new structural definition, a conjointure, akin to that of romance, combining a logical episteme with a rhetorical narreme. The episteme features a contradictory taken from Boolean algebra, and assumes four different forms, depending on whether ambiguity resulting from the contradictory is understood by neither, by both, or by either the sender or the receiver of a message, In the first two instances, a character foreign to the episteme intervenes to resolve confusion in the narreme, or appears as the victim of the sophistical assumption of a contrary-to-fact reality; in the latter instances the sender or the receiver of the message in the episteme triumphs in the narreme. The resulting inventory, including and augmenting the texts admitted by Per Nykrog and discarding numerous stories already challenged for authenticity, is theoretically defensible to a degree not previously achieved.

ROY PEARCY is an Honorary Research Fellow of the University of London.

 

DETAILS

10 line illustrations
264 pages
Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm
10 digit ISBN: 1843841223
13 digit ISBN: 9781843841227
Binding: Hardback
First published: 18/Oct/2007
Price: 105.00 USD / 55.00 GBP
Imprint: D. S. Brewer
Series: Gallica
Subject: Medieval Literature

BIC class: CSBD

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 15/07/2008

Contents
   Introduction
1   Origins: Fable to fabliau. Cele qui se fist foutre sur la Fosse de son Mari
2   Outline of a Methodology [I]: The Logical Contradictories
3   Outline of a Methodology [II]: Episteme and Narreme
4   Origins: Fabliau to fable. The Paris B.N. fr. 12603 version of Auberee
5   The Fabliau canon
6   Fabliau structures [I]: Single narreme fabliaux
7   Fabliau structures [II]: Multiple narreme fabliaux
8   Fabliau aesthetic
9   Conclusion
10   Appendices
11   Fabliau inventory
12   Bibliography
13   Index

 

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