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Tragicomedy

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Genre of drama and literature
"Tragicomic" redirects here. For the album, seeTragicomic (album).
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Tragicomedy is aliterary genre that blends aspects of bothtragic andcomic forms. Most often seen indramatic literature, the term can describe either a tragic play which contains enough comic elements to lighten the overall mood or a serious play with a happy ending.[1] Tragicomedy, as its name implies, invokes the intended response of both the tragedy and the comedy in the audience, the former being a genre based on human suffering that invokes an accompanyingcatharsis and the latter being a genre intended to be humorous or amusing by inducing laughter.

In theatre

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Classical precedent

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There is no concise formal definition of tragicomedy from theclassical age. It appears that the Greek philosopherAristotle had something like the Renaissance meaning of the term (that is, a serious action with a happy ending) in mind when, inPoetics, he discusses tragedy with a dual ending.[2] In this respect, a number ofGreek andRoman plays, for instanceAlcestis, may be called tragicomedies, though without any definite attributes outside of plot. The word itself originates with the Roman comic playwrightPlautus, who coined the term (tragicomoedia in Latin) somewhat facetiously in the prologue to his playAmphitryon. The character Mercury, sensing the indecorum of the inclusion of both kings and gods alongside servants in a comedy, declares that the play had better be a "tragicomoedia":[3]

I will make it a mixture: let it be a tragicomedy. I don't think it would be appropriate to make it consistently a comedy, when there are kings and gods in it. What do you think? Since a slave also has a part in the play, I'll make it a tragicomedy...—Plautus,Amphitryon[4]

Renaissance revivals

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Italy

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Two figures helped to elevate tragicomedy to the status of a regular genre, by which is meant one with its own set of rigid rules. First wasGiovanni Battista Giraldi Cinthio, a dramatist working in the mid-sixteenth century who developed a treatise on drama modeled on Roman comedies and tragedies as opposed to early Greek-based treatises that became the model for Italian dramatists at the time. He argued for a version of tragicomedy where a tragic story was told with a happy or comic ending (tragedia a lieto fine), which he thought were better suited for staged performances as opposed to tragedies with unhappy endings which he thought were better when read.[5] Even more important wasGiovanni Battista Guarini. Guarini'sIl Pastor Fido, published in 1590, provoked a fierce critical debate in which Guarini's spirited defense of generic innovation eventually carried the day. Guarini's tragicomedy offered modulated action that never drifted too far either to comedy or tragedy, mannered characters, and a pastoral setting. All three became staples of continental tragicomedy for a century and more.

England

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In England, where practice ran ahead of theory, the situation was quite different. In the sixteenth century, "tragicomedy" meant the native sort of romantic play that violated the unities of time, place, and action, that glibly mixed high- and low-born characters, and that presented fantastic actions. These were the featuresPhilip Sidney deplored in his complaint against the "mungrell Tragy-comedie" of the 1580s, and of which Shakespeare'sPolonius offers famous testimony: "The best actors in the world, either for tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral, pastoral-comical, historical-pastoral, tragical-historical, tragical-comical-historical-pastoral, scene individuable, or poem unlimited: Seneca cannot be too heavy, nor Plautus too light. For the law of writ and the liberty, these are the only men." Some aspects of this romantic impulse remain even in the work of more sophisticated playwrights:Shakespeare's last plays, which may well be called tragicomedies, have often been calledromances.

By the early Stuart period, some English playwrights had absorbed the lessons of the Guarini controversy.John Fletcher'sThe Faithful Shepherdess, an adaptation of Guarini's play, was produced in 1608. In the printed edition, Fletcher offered a definition of the term, stating that: "A tragi-comedie is not so called in respect of mirth and killing, but in respect it wants deaths, which is enough to make it no tragedy, yet brings some neere it, which is inough to make it no comedie." Fletcher's definition focuses primarily on events: a play's genre is determined by whether or not people die in it, and in a secondary way on how close the action comes to a death. But, as Eugene Waith showed, the tragicomedy Fletcher developed in the next decade also had unifying stylistic features: sudden and unexpected revelations, outré plots, distant locales, and a persistent focus on elaborate, artificial rhetoric.

Some of Fletcher's contemporaries, notablyPhilip Massinger[6] andJames Shirley,[7] wrote popular tragicomedies.Richard Brome also essayed the form, but with less success. And many of their contemporary writers, ranging fromJohn Ford toLodowick Carlell to SirAston Cockayne, made attempts in the genre.

Tragicomedy remained fairly popular up to the closing of the theaters in 1642, and Fletcher's works were popular in the Restoration as well. The old styles were cast aside as tastes changed in the eighteenth century; the "tragedy with a happy ending" eventually developed intomelodrama, in which form it still flourishes.

Landgartha (1640) byHenry Burnell, the first play by an Irish playwright to be performed in an Irish theatre, was explicitly described by its author as a tragicomedy. Critical reaction to the play was universally hostile, partly it seems because the ending was neither happy nor unhappy. Burnell in his introduction to the printed edition of the play attacked his critics for their ignorance, pointing out that as they should know perfectly well, many plays are neither tragedy nor comedy, but "something between".

Later developments

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Criticism that developed after the Renaissance stressed the thematic and formal aspects of tragicomedy, rather than plot.Gotthold Ephraim Lessing defined it as a mixture of emotions in which "seriousness stimulates laughter, and pain pleasure."[8] Tragicomedy's affinity with satire and "dark" comedy have suggested a tragicomic impulse in modern theatre withLuigi Pirandello who influenced many playwrights including Samuel Beckett and Tom Stoppard.[9] Also it can be seen inabsurdist drama.Friedrich Dürrenmatt, the Swiss dramatist, suggested that tragicomedy was the inevitable genre for the twentieth century; he describes his playThe Visit (1956) as a tragicomedy. Tragicomedy is a common genre in post-World War IIBritish theatre, with authors as varied asSamuel Beckett,Tom Stoppard,John Arden,Alan Ayckbourn andHarold Pinter writing in this genre.Vladimir Nabokov's postmodern 1962 novelPale Fire is a tragicomedy preoccupied with Elizabethan drama.[10]

Postmodern tragicomedy

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American writers of themetamodernist andpostmodernist movements have made use of tragicomedy and/orgallows humor. A notable example of ametamodernist tragicomedy isDavid Foster Wallace's 1996magnum opus,Infinite Jest. Wallace writes of comedic elements of living in a halfway house (i.e. "some people really do look like rodents"), a place steeped in human tragedy and suffering.[11]

Tragicomedy in media

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Films includingLife is Beautiful,Mary and Max,Parasite,Jojo Rabbit,The Banshees of Inisherin,Beau Is Afraid,Robot Dreams, andMemoir of a Snail have been described as tragicomedies.[12][13][14]Television series includingSuccession,Killing Eve,Breaking Bad,Better Call Saul,Fleabag,I May Destroy You,BoJack Horseman,South Park,Steven Universe Future,Moral Orel,Barry,Made for Love, andThe White Lotus have also been described as tragicomedies.[15][16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Dewar-Watson, Sarah; Eds. Subha Mukherji and Raphael Lyne (2007)."Aristotle and Tragicomedy." Early Modern Tragicomedy. Brewer. pp. 15–23.ISBN 978-1-84384-130-2. Retrieved26 January 2012.
  2. ^Poetics: XIII, End of 2nd paragraph, Trans: Bywater, Ingram, 1920
  3. ^Foster, Verna A. (2004).The Name and Nature of Tragicomedy. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. p. 16.ISBN 0-7546-3567-8.
  4. ^Plautus (2007)."Amphitryon." Qtd. in Introduction to Early Modern Tragicomedy. Eds. Subha Mukherji and Raphael Lyne. Suffolk, UK: DS Brewer. pp. 8–9.ISBN 978-1-84384-130-2.
  5. ^Schironi, F. (2016).The Reception of Ancient Drama in Renaissance Italy. In 1316154068 967100427 B. V. Smit (Ed.),A handbook to the reception of Greek drama (1st ed., pp. 135-136). Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
  6. ^Farajallah, Hana Fathi; Kitishat, Amal Riyadh (2019-01-01)."The Self and the Other in Philip Massinger's "The Renegado, the Gentleman of Venice": A Structural View".Theory and Practice in Language Studies.9 (1): 118.doi:10.17507/tpls.0901.17.ISSN 1799-2591.
  7. ^Dyson, Jessica (2019-02-25),"Caroline tragedy",The genres of Renaissance tragedy, Manchester University Press,doi:10.7765/9781526138262.00016,ISBN 978-1-5261-3826-2,S2CID 197955255, retrieved2020-10-27
  8. ^Paulus, Jörg. "Barbara Fischer / Thomas C. Fox, A Companion to the Works of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing. 2005".Arbitrium.25 (2).ISSN 0723-2977.
  9. ^Ben-Zvi, Linda (1998-01-31), Innes, Christopher; Marker, F.J (eds.),"Samuel Beckett's Media Plays",Modernism in European Drama: Ibsen, Strindberg, Pirandello, Beckett, Toronto: University of Toronto Press,doi:10.3138/9781442677319-021,ISBN 978-1-4426-7731-9, retrieved2020-10-27
  10. ^Canfield, J. Douglas (1984)."The Ideology of Restoration Tragicomedy".ELH.51 (3):447–464.doi:10.2307/2872933.ISSN 0013-8304.JSTOR 2872933.The radically disorienting play of frames in a postmodern fiction like Pale Fire-another text, it is worth noting, preoccupied with Elizabethan drama.
  11. ^Goodman, Daniel Ross (2015-12-11)."Infinite Wallace: Tragedy, Comedy, and Faith in the Life of David Foster Wallace".Public Discourse. Retrieved2020-10-27.
  12. ^Jiménez, Jesús (2021-10-03)."Pablo Berger Me he pasado a la animación porque me enamoré de Robot Dreams".RTVE.es (in Spanish).Archived from the original on 2023-08-17. Retrieved2023-08-18.
  13. ^Rooney, David (1998-01-04)."Life Is Beautiful".Variety. Retrieved2024-10-16.
  14. ^"Memoir of a Snail movie review (2024) | Roger Ebert".www.rogerebert.com. Retrieved2024-10-16.
  15. ^Pym, Olivia (2020-08-02)."The Best Tragicomedies To Watch In These Amusingly Dire Times".Esquire. Retrieved2022-10-15.
  16. ^"The Brilliant, Biting Social Satire of "The White Lotus"".The New Yorker. 2021-07-21. Retrieved2022-10-15.

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