Definition of Comedy
Comedy is a literary
genre and a type of dramatic work that is amusing and satirical in its
tone, mostly having a cheerful ending. The
motif of this dramatic work is triumph over unpleasant circumstance by creating comic effects, resulting in a happy or successful
conclusion.
Thus, the purpose of comedy is to amuse the
audience. Comedy has multiple sub-genres depending upon the source of the
humor,
context in which an author delivers dialogues, and delivery methods, which include
farce,
satire, and burlesque.
Tragedy is opposite to comedy, as tragedy deals with sorrowful and tragic events in a story.
Types of Comedy
There are five types of comedy in literature:
Romantic Comedy
Romantic comedy involves a
theme
of love leading to a happy conclusion. We find romantic comedy in
Shakespearean plays and some Elizabethan contemporaries. These plays are
concerned with idealized love affairs. It is a fact that true love
never runs smoothly; however, love overcomes difficulties and ends in a
happy union.
Comedy of Humors
Ben
Johnson is the first dramatist who conceived and popularized this
dramatic genre during the late sixteenth century. The term humor derives
from the Latin word
humor, which means “liquid.” It comes from
a theory that the human body has four liquids, or humors, which include
phelgm, blood, yellow bile, and black bile. It explains that, when
human beings have a balance of these humors in their bodies, they remain
healthy.
Comedy of Manners
This form of
dramatic genre deals with intrigues and relations of ladies and
gentlemen living in a sophisticated society. This form relies upon high
comedy, derived from sparkle and wit of dialogues, violations of social
traditions, and good manners, by nonsense characters like jealous
husbands, wives, and foppish dandies. We find its use in Restoration
dramatists, particularly in the works of Wycherley and Congreve.
Sentimental Comedy
Sentimental
drama
contains both comedy and sentimental tragedy. It appears in literary
circles due to reaction of the middle class against obscenity and
indecency of Restoration Comedy of Manners. This form, which
incorporates scenes with extreme emotions evoking excessive pity, gained
popularity among the middle class audiences in the eighteenth century.
Tragicomedy
This dramatic genre contains both tragic and comedic elements. It blends both elements to lighten the overall
mood of the
play. Often,
tragicomedy is a serious play that ends happily.
Comedy Examples from Literature
Example #1: A Midsummer Night’s Dream (By William Shakespeare)
William Shakespeare’s play,
A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
is a good example of a romantic comedy, presenting young lovers falling
comically in and out of love for a brief period. Their real world
problems get resolved magically, enemies reconcile, and true lovers
unite in the end.
Example #2: Every Man in His Humor (By Ben Johnson)
In his play
Every Man in His Humor,
Ben Johnson brings a comedy of humors. An overpowering suspicion of,
and obsession with, his wife – that she might be unfaithful to him –
controls Kitely. Then a country gull determines every decision of George
Downright in order to understand the manners of the city gallant.
Kno’well worried for
moral development of his son, tries to spy on him.
Example #3: The Conscious Lovers (By Sir Richard Steele)
Sir Richard Steele’s play,
The Conscious Lovers, is a best-known and popular sentimental comedy, which is like a
melodrama. It characterizes extreme
exaggeration, dealing with trials of its penniless leading role Indiana. The play ends happily with the discovery of Indiana as heiress.
Example #4: All’s Well that Ends Well (By William Shakespeare)
Shakespeare’s play,
All’s Well that Ends Well,
perfectly sums up tragic and comic elements. This tragicomedy play
shows antics of low-born but devoted Helena, who attempts to win the
love of her lover, Bertram. She finally succeeds in marrying him, though
she decides not to accept him until she wears the family ring of her
husband and bears him a child. She employs a great deal of trickery by
disguising herself as Bertram’s other, and fakes her death. Bertram
discovers her treachery at the end but realizes Helena did all that for
him and expresses his love for her.
Function of Comedy
Comedy
tends to bring humor and induce laughter in plays, films, and theaters.
The primary function of comedy is to amuse and entertain the audience,
while it also portrays social institutions and persons as corrupt, and
ridicules them through satirizing, parodying, and poking fun at their
vices. By doing this, authors expose foibles and follies of individuals
and society by using comic elements.
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