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  • Parody - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    A parody (pronounced [ˈpɛɹədiː]), in contemporary usage, is a work created to mock, comment on, or poke fun at an original work, its subject, or author, by means of humorous ...

  • Parody definition |Dictionary.com

    noun . 1. a humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing: his hilarious parody of Hamlet's soliloquy. 2. the genre of literary composition ...

  • Parody

    There is no excuse what so ever for any of these, even that I was bored at the time is really no sort of mitigation. If you're easily offended or have any taste ...

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Parody

Encyclopedia Article

Parody, comic imitation of a piece of writing. For the ancient Greeks it was a comic imitation of a serious poem. The term has come to be applied also to the comic imitation of history, fiction, scientific writing, or any other prose.

Parody, like travesty, is a form of burlesque. The essence of parody is the treatment of a light theme in the style appropriate to a serious work. Such is “The Nun's Priest's Tale” from The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer; the hubbub caused by Master Reynard in the widow's household is described in language suggestive of the fall of Troy. The humour lies in the contrast between subject matter and the treatment of it. In travesty, the characters of the original are turned to a humorous account by some change in the incidents that results in a debasement of the original theme. In parody, the theme and the characters are greatly modified or completely changed, but the style of the original is closely followed in those peculiarities that easily lend themselves to ridicule.

Most famous writers have been parodied, and those who have written parody include Aristophanes, Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, William Makepeace Thackeray, James Joyce, Sir Max Beerbohm, and Ogden Nash.

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