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On Puns: The Foundation of Letters
  
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On Puns: The Foundation of Letters (Paperback)

~ Jonathan Culler (Author)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

"In the beginning was the pun." Samuel Beckett's sardonic revision of Scripture carries an insight that this collection of essays seeks to develop. The pun is traditionally labelled as "the lowest form of wit." To defend puns, then, would be to show that it can be an amusing and revealing form of cleverness, instances of genuine wit. The essays in this collection take a different view, exploring ways in which puns reveal the fundamental workings of language. These essays touch upon a wide range of literary examples, from the constitutive role of word play in classical literature and in late medieval poetry to the semantic aspects of rhyme and the implication of "Finnegans Wake"'s exploitation of puns and portmanteau words. They give special attention to the importance of puns as revealed in new developments in psychoanalysis - in the work of Lacan, Abraham and Torok, and in contemporary rereadings of Freud's case histories - and to what deconstruction suggests about the powerful role of puns in concept formation. Jonathan Culler's deductions draw out the implications of this wide-ranging collection and suggest that taking puns seriously might lead us to think differently about language.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Blackwell Pub (June 1988)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0631158944
  • ISBN-13: 978-0631158943
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,262,475 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #99 in  Books > Entertainment > Humor > Puns & Wordplay

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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This is a collection of essays, December 28, 1999
By Jonathan Culler (Paris, France) - See all my reviews
The first reviewer fails to note the basic fact that this is a collection of essays by different writers, some of them witty and graceful, others less so. The sentence he or she quotes is from the most rebarbative essay, and readers who are put off by this sample of the prose should read the essays by Derek Attridge, Debra Fried and Fred Ahl, for example.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Where's the Beef?, October 16, 1998
By A Customer
"Is it the meat or is it the motion?" Jonathan Culler asks irreverently in this ambitious book on puns and the origins of "written" literature. In other words, which is the more persuasive of the two dominant competing theories of literature's origins--the essentialist or the pragmatic. Try as he might to be evenhanded in his presentation of both theories, he doesn't leave you in doubt as to his preference for the latter. Though he commits himself in the introduction to writing his book more for the general reader than for the specialist, he compromises his intent by frequently resorting to turgid, opaque prose; for example: "By their coaxial ambivalence, the anal and the nasal "markers" crystallize the discomfiture that must have been felt by the first hominid rising out of the miasmal mists of consciousness." If this weren't enough of a distraction for the reader, his theory that the transition from oral to written literature first manifested itself in, of all places, prehistoric Finland should make one's head spin. All in all, this a book that only a graduate student will take unqualified pleasure in reading.
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