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Journal Article

Citation

Parisot E. Eighteenth-century fiction 2022; 34(4): 393-414.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022)

DOI

10.3138/ECF.34.4.393

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The Suicide, A Comedy (1778) by George Colman (the Elder) is a sophisticated comedic response to the scourge of fashionable suicide in late eighteenth-century Britain. Te play simultaneously operates on two comedic planes: (1) it aims the purgative power of contemptible and socially aversive satire at the bon-ton by insinuating the scandalous suicide of high-profile aristocrat John Damer (1744-76); and (2) the reformation of Tobine-the middle-class protagonist who aspires to fashionable self-destruction-invests in the socially rehabilitative and compassionate humour of sentimental comedy. Two comedic strategies are aimed at two different audiences, with both strategies working to reinforce middle-class values. Te result is a comedy that merges two kinds of laughter to form a benign affective antidote to interclass suicidal contagion. This comedic antidote functions as an early demonstration of the positive value of narratives that depict the overcoming of suicidal intent-or what modern sociologists call the Papageno effect. © 2022 University of Toronto Press. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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