208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this handy volume, Claire Colebrook offers an overview of the history and structure of irony, from Socrates to the present.
    Students will welcome this clear, concise guide, which:
    *traces the use of the concept through history, from Greek times to the Romantic period and on to the postmodern era
    *looks closely at the work of Socrates and the more contemporary theorists Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze
    *explores the philosophical, literary and political dimensions of irony
    *applies theories of irony to literary texts
    Making even the most difficult debates accessible and clear, this is the ideal student introduction to the many theories of irony.

    Chapter 1 THE CONCEPT OF IRONY; Chapter 2 THE PHILOSOPHY OF IRONY; Chapter 3 ROMANTIC IRONY; Chapter 4 BEYOND IRONY AND SUBJECTIVITY, Byron, Swift; Chapter 5 IRONY OUT OF CONTEXT; Chapter 6 SATIRE AND THE LIMITS OF IRONY; Chapter 7 HUMOUR AND IRONY; Chapter 8 POSTMODERNISM, PARODY AND IRONY; CONCLUSION; GLOSSARY; References Index;

    Biography

    Claire Colebrook teaches English at the University of Edinburgh. Her publications include Gilles Deleuze, in the Routledge Critical Thinkers series and Irony in the Work of Philosophy.