Spoudaiogeloion
Template:Short description Spoudaiogeloion (Template:Langx) denotes the mixture of serious and comical elements stylistically.Template:Sfn The word comes from the Greek σπουδαῖον spoudaion, "serious", and γελοῖον geloion, "comical".Template:Sfn
The concept of the word, but not the word itself, first appears in Aristophanes's The Frogs (405 BC) lines 389–393, in a scene where the Chorus, who are devoted to Demeter, pray for victory: καὶ πολλὰ μὲν γελοῖά μ’ εἰπεῖν, πολλὰ δὲ σπουδαῖα, καὶ τὴς σὴς ἑορτὴς ἁείως παίσαντα καὶ σκώψαντα νικήσαντα ταινιούσθαι. (Allow me to say many things in jest and many things in seriousness, and, having sported and lampooned in a manner worthy of your feast, let me, victorious, win the victor's wreath.)Template:Sfn The word was first coined in the Old Comedy period.Template:Sfn
Spoudaiogeloion was often used in satirical poems or folktales, which were funny, but had a serious, often ethical, theme.Template:Sfn The serio-comic style became a rhetorical mainstay of the Cynics. The Romans gave it its own genre in the form of satire, contributed to most notably by the poets Horace and Juvenal.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It was the most common tone of the works made by Menippus and Meleager of Gadara.Template:Sfn
ExamplesEdit
- Satires 1 by HoraceTemplate:Sfn