Preface 1. Etymologies: Getting to the Root of It 2. The Song of the Komos 3. The Lyre and the Phallus 4. Aristophanes: The One and Only? 5. Failure and Success 6. The Birds: The Uncensored Fantasy 7. Requiem for a Genre? 8. The Comic Catastrophe 9. O Menander! O Life! 10. Plautus Makes an Entrance 11. A Plautine Problem Play 12. Terence: The African Connection 13. The Mother-in-Law of Modern Comedy 14. Machiavelli: The Comedy of Evil 15. Marlowe: Schade and Freude 16. Shakespeare: Errors and Eros 17. Twelfth Night: Dark Clouds over Illyria 18. Moliere: The Class of '68 19. The Fox, the Fops, and the Factotum 20. Comedy Explodes 21. Beckett: The Death of Comedy Coda Notes Index
Its sweep of knowledge, learning unostentatiously presented, and its atmosphere of unsentimental engagement make The Death of Comedy broad and enlightening. Eminently readable, with flashes of wit and spice, it is the work of a distinguished scholar and creative writer. -- Eric Handley, Trinity College Cambridge University Erich Segal's introduction to ancient comedy in this book will both interest and delight many readers. -- Hugh Lloyd-Jones Erich Segal's discussion of Shakespeare's comic genius is richly informed by his deep knowledge of the classical comedy which influenced Shakespeare. Segal's brio is all but Shakespearean in its laughing intensity. -- Harold Bloom
Erich Segal taught at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton and was a Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford. He is the author of nine bestselling novels.
Respected classics scholar and popular novelist Segal (Love Story, etc.) here presents the culmination of work begun in 1968 with Roman Laughter, a discussion of Plautus as a writer of festive comedy. Segal surveys the history of classical drama from its origin to its "death" at the hands of Samuel Beckett. Over half the book is a study of Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus, and Terence, with a lengthy aside on Euripides. Segal then examines a selection of plays that followed classical models of structure and theme through Machiavelli, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Molire, Jonson, and Wycherley. He argues that the thread of classical comedy reached its climax with Beaumarchais's The Marriage of Figaro and then declined as language failed and theme and structure disintegrated, ending with the silence of Beckett. This academic monograph is readable, erudite, and witty. Segal is a wonderful companion with whom to read these plays. Enthusiastically recommended. Thomas E. Luddy, Salem State Coll., MA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Its sweep of knowledge, learning unostentatiously presented, and
its atmosphere of unsentimental engagement make The Death of
Comedy broad and enlightening. Eminently readable, with flashes
of wit and spice, it is the work of a distinguished scholar and
creative writer. -- Eric Handley, Trinity College Cambridge
University
Erich Segal's introduction to ancient comedy in this book will both
interest and delight many readers. -- Hugh Lloyd-Jones
Erich Segal's discussion of Shakespeare's comic genius is richly
informed by his deep knowledge of the classical comedy which
influenced Shakespeare. Segal's brio is all but Shakespearean in
its laughing intensity. -- Harold Bloom
Explaining and analyzing comedy is a thankless task; humor either
flies or it falls, and most theatergoers do not require a more
experienced hand to guide them in their responses. Given these
exigencies, Segal's interpretive achievements soar in a work both
accessible and informative. Offering a sweeping tour of comic
theater from the Greeks to Beckett, he argues wistfully that the
dour Irishman killed off the swell old stuff of life and laughter,
in which plots ended right where they should in the joys of
marriage and home. The lay reader...will find much to enjoy in a
genial perusal of western civilization's funniest theatrical
moments. Then ample quotations provide a gut-busting overview of
theater at its hilarious best. If only every writer so smart were
so engaging. * Kirkus Reviews *
[Erich Segal's] new study of comedy in the Western theater displays
the strengths he has built in both the arenas in which he competes.
His scholarship is impressive: he manages to discuss in detail
works by every major comic writer from Aristophanes and Plautus to
Ionesco and Beckett. He is especially good on the Greek and Roman
comic playwrights, and he spends at least half the book on those
influential but, to the modern reader, lesser-known writers.
Flexing his pop novelist's muscles, Segal conveys his ideas in
clean, graceful, witty, and above all, highly accessible prose. You
don't need a Ph.D. from Harvard to understand him, and you don't
need to fully accept his thesis that traditional comedy 'died' or
perhaps was killed by the modernist writers to enjoy and be
enlightened by this lively book. -- Jack Helbig * Booklist *
This academic monograph is readable, erudite, and witty. Segal is a
wonderful companion with whom to read these plays. Enthusiastically
recommended. -- Thomas E. Luddy * Library Journal *
[Segal's] hearty, sprawling book...puts all his skills as a popular
novelist, screenwriter and professor of classics to work on
surveying the evolution of comic drama in the West. From the
ancient Greek countryside to the theater of the absurd, it's a
story of general decline punctuated by brilliance, and it ends with
a startling obituary. Comedy is dead, Segal says, weakened as early
as Aristophanes and finally murdered in modernity by the likes of
George Bernard Shaw, Eugene Ionesco and Samuel Beckett...He's
generous with information about theaters and stagecraft, and his
original translations capture the human appetite for carnival so
dynamically they practically pop off the stage. -- Joy Connolly *
New York Times Book Review *
The Death of Comedy is not...a dry treatise on things you
should read, whether you think they are funny or not. Throughout,
it is punctuated with astute comparisons to contemporary situations
and with wonderfully earthy translations, in particular of
Aristophanes. Segal renders the Greek so frankly that, perhaps for
the first time, readers will see why they should have laughed at
Aristophanes when they were forced to read him in that archly fussy
translation dated 1901. -- Jonathan S. Perry * Washington Post
*
Erich Segal's survey of comedies from A to B (that is, from
Aristophanes to Samuel Beckett) is a comic parallel to George
Steiner's The Death of Tragedy, an equally virtuosic and
wide-ranging study...Like Steiner, Segal writes with such
enthusiastic brilliance that I am left rushing off to read plays I
have never quite got round to reading and to reread dozens of
others I thought I knew, to discover, in the light of what he says.
I hardly knew them. -- Peter Holland * Jewish Chronicle *
The book is engagingly written and spiced with clever translations
and observations; Segal enjoys the theater and has read
widely...[T]he book offers detailed plot summaries that will serve
the general reader as an entertaining guide to the treasures and
pleasures of a great tradition. Unusual in surveying the genre of
comedy on so broad a canvas, the book is recommended for readers at
all levels. -- D. Konstan * Choice *
Simply as history of the genre, [The Death of Comedy's]
unique importance is its centering of the story in antiquity rather
than after, and its convincing demonstration that the longer
history of comedy is a series of responses to a poetics of comic
drama, the lines of which were determined in the ancient
world...[T]he writing fizzes, the translations are uniformly
wonderful and the deep foundations of learning on which the whole
project is built are discreetly cupboarded away in a hundred or so
pages of endnotes. It is, in more than one sense, a personal
history, the record of a lifelong project of investigation into how
the popular can be serious, the classicist an entertainer--and in
both cases and more importantly still, vice versa. -- Nick Lowe *
Times Literary Supplement *
Segal's fluent and appealing style is again evident in The Death
of Comedy...Segal's style of writing is lively and
entertaining. He wears his erudition lightly but the solid
substratum of the wealth of references to sources ancient and
modern is contained in the endnotes...[The Death of Comedy]
provides a valuable and sprightly introduction to and overview of
the subject. -- Betine van Zyl Smit * Scholia Reviews *
This is a very grand survey of theatrical comedy from genesis to
alleged nemesis, that is, from Aristophanes to Samuel Beckett. It
is a huge, witty, learned and frequently engaging global tour of
the genre, with numerous wise, or wise-ish, stopovers at most of
the major comic sites between origin and suggested meltdown. --
Valentine Cunningham * Times Higher Education Supplement *
Segal tells a cracking good story, a wondrous tale of comedy's life
from its birth in the night of chaos B.A. (Before Aristophanes) to
its recent death...Enjoyable and thought-provoking. -- Alison
Sharrock * Journal of Hellenic Studies *
Erich Segal's book The Death of Comedy is without a doubt
the most comprehensive treatise to have been published for many a
year about this marvelous genre. -- Yitzhak Laor * Haaretz *
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