Rabelais and His World |
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Page 149
... image of excrement . ( These images were already combined in the popular expression he quotes . ) He saw no sacrilege in doing so and did not anticipate the stylistic abyss that was to draw the line between the two terms for the men of ...
... image of excrement . ( These images were already combined in the popular expression he quotes . ) He saw no sacrilege in doing so and did not anticipate the stylistic abyss that was to draw the line between the two terms for the men of ...
Page 282
... images symbolized the working people , continuing to conquer life and food through struggle and labor and to absorb only that part of the world that has been con- quered and mastered . In such a system the banquet images preserve their ...
... images symbolized the working people , continuing to conquer life and food through struggle and labor and to absorb only that part of the world that has been con- quered and mastered . In such a system the banquet images preserve their ...
Page 301
... images . This element survives in our modern toasts . There is still another significant aspect of the banquet images , which we have not as yet mentioned . This is the special relation of food to death and to the underworld . The word ...
... images . This element survives in our modern toasts . There is still another significant aspect of the banquet images , which we have not as yet mentioned . This is the special relation of food to death and to the underworld . The word ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
ONE Rabelais in the History of Laughter | 59 |
TWO The Language of the Marketplace in Rabelais | 145 |
Copyright | |
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Abel Lefranc ambivalent ancient antique aspect banquet images birth blazons bodily lower stratum carnival carnival spirit carnivalesque Chapter character comic completely concept culture death debasement devil diableries drink earth elements entire episode especially expressed familiar fear feast of fools festive folk culture forms Fourth Book François Rabelais Friar John Gargantua genre Goethe grotesque body grotesque image grotesque realism hell Hippocrates historic human humor imagery important king language laugh laughter legends linked literary literature marketplace material bodily lower meaning medieval Menippus Middle Ages nature novel objects official organs Pantagruel Panurge Panurge's Paris parody peculiar phallus philosophy picture play popular popular-festive praise-abuse present prologue Pulcinella Rabe Rabelais Rabelaisian regenerating Renaissance renewal role Roman Saint satire Saturnalia Schneegans serious sixteenth century speech sphere spirit stress swabs symbol system of images tesque theme tion tone tradition transformed travesty truth typical uncrowning underworld urine utopian wine words