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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Black_comedyBlack comedy - Wikipedia

    The concept of black humor first came to nationwide attention after the publication of a 1965 mass-market paperback titled Black Humor, edited by Bruce Jay Friedman. [7][16] The paperback was one of the first American anthologies devoted to the concept of black humor as a literary genre.

  3. Feb 26, 2007 · A Short History of Black Comedy. Stand-up comedian Darryl Littleton talks with Tony Cox about his book Black Comedians on Black Comedy: How African-Americans Taught Us to Laugh.

  4. Oct 22, 2024 · The term black comedy has been applied to playwrights in the Theatre of the Absurd, especially Eugène Ionesco, as in Les Chaises (produced 1952; The Chairs). Antecedents to black humour include the comedies of Aristophanes (5th century bc ), François Rabelais’s Pantagruel (1532), parts of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels (1726), and ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Oct 14, 2024 · A kind of drama (or, by extension, a non-dramatic work) in which disturbing or sinister subjects like death, disease, or warfare, are treated with bitter amusement, usually in a manner calculated to offend and shock. Prominent in the theatre of the absurd, black comedy is also a feature of Joe Orton's Loot (1965).

  6. Jul 9, 2023 · But dark humor, also known as black comedy, can be found in classic literature, where the tradition originally flourished. From Seneca to Charles Bukowski, these writers demonstrate the power...

  7. Jun 3, 2024 · The term comes from French writer André Breton in his aptly titled 1940 “Anthology of Black Humor” (or as he called it, “l’humour noir”). Breton calls 18th-century writer Jonathan Swift the...

  8. Mar 3, 2009 · Author Darryl Littleton traces the roots of black comedy from the early days of Mantan Moreland to the modern comedic stylings of Chris Rock.

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