Webbläsaren som du använder stöds inte av denna webbplats. Alla versioner av Internet Explorer stöds inte längre, av oss eller Microsoft (läs mer här: * https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/windows/end-of-ie-support).

Var god och använd en modern webbläsare för att ta del av denna webbplats, som t.ex. nyaste versioner av Edge, Chrome, Firefox eller Safari osv.

Redistributed Bodiliness : The Reception of French Fable Comedies in Eighteenth-Century Scandinavia

Författare

Redaktör

  • Katharina Müller
  • Stephan Michael Schröder

Summary, in English

The chapter traces the eighteenth-century reception in Scandinavia of Edme Boursault’s fable comedy Esope (1690). After some initial difficulties, Boursault’s play, innovatively combining the popular genres of fable and comedy, scored a success at the Comédie Française and was also staged abroad. The fable comedy in 1722 reached the playhouse in Copenhagen in a Danish translation, entitled Aesopus and based on the English adaptation. Aesopus was, however, performed only once. Moreover, the fables were subsequently broken loose from the comedy and published separately. The paper discusses the abortive Danish reaction to the fable comedy in terms of a redistribution of the double function of utile dulci. Since the fables in Boursault’s theatrical invention were assigned primarily the function of moral usefulness, they had – in order to regain their full pleasure value and their full corporeality – to be liberated from the dramatic whole. Thus interpreted, the Danish reception reflects the basic instability of the French genre fusion.

Publiceringsår

2016

Språk

Engelska

Sidor

49-66

Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie

Kosmopolitismus und Körperlichkeit im europäischen Theater des 18. Jahrhunderts

Dokumenttyp

Del av eller Kapitel i bok

Förlag

Herbert Utz Verlag

Ämne

  • Specific Literatures

Nyckelord

  • fable
  • comedy
  • Edme Boursault
  • genre fusion
  • reception
  • Scandinavia

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt

  • ISBN: 978-3-8316-4428-5