The COLUMBUS Model, Part II
p. 121-136
Abstract
We focus on a category of humour devices, at the meet of discourse analysis and of weak anticipation (in the form of a literary playful ascription of causality transgressing on the unavailability of the future). In Part I of the present paper I exemplified a goal-and-plan driven formal analysis of what makes humour tick, in a given literary text : Rosenzweig's century-old satire of life in America, whose name he mock-etymologizes by an apocriphal anecdote on Columbus.
Text
References
Bibliographical reference
Ephraim Nissan, « The COLUMBUS Model, Part II », CASYS, 12 | 2002, 121-136.
Electronic reference
Ephraim Nissan, « The COLUMBUS Model, Part II », CASYS [Online], 12 | 2002, Online since 16 July 2024, connection on 10 January 2025. URL : http://popups.lib.uliege.be/1373-5411/index.php?id=1701
Author
Ephraim Nissan
School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, The University of Greenwich, Queen Mary Court, Old Royal Naval College, 30 Park Row, Greenwich, London SE10 9LS, England, U.K.