The definition of comedy in the contemporary meaning of the term, is any discourse or work generally intended to be humorous or to amuse by inducing laughter, especially in theatre, television, film and stand-up comedy, (Source: www.Wikipeadia.com). So more basically, an artistic creation that is humorous - provkes laughter - in a number of ways including literture, TV and threatre. Furthermore, the word comedy seems to have steamed from the Greek verb meaning ‘to revel’. This was the earliest signs from Greece of the 4th Century BCE, (Source: www.britannica.com)
Shakespearean Comedy always ends in marriage as well as hinting at new life; this is very much opposite to the tradgies written at the same time. The light-hearted comedies like A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Tempest and Twelfth Night are all examples of this, (Source: www.opensourceshakespeare.org). Northrop Frye believes that – as an audience – we favour happy endings automatically as we desire that ending. Furthermore, he believes that comedy is traditonally based on several compliations in a narrative – coming together in the ending – whislt matching the deserving tradgic verison like how we expect a comedy to end, (Source: www.thinctanc.co.uk)
The great thing with comedy is that there is no rules meaning it can be very subejctive. This could be why different things make people laugh. For example, puns, jokes, innuendos and being tickled may make a person laugh but also pain inflicked through idiotcy, awkward situations and references to past memory. Comedy is light-hearted that it is almost like it is only visable out of the corner of your eye; once you look directly or try and analyse it’s the funniess disappears.
Typical comic connventions in liturature and television are sorted into four main unnamed sections. Firstly, the audience knows what is going to happen next . The comedy is the expection and anticaipation that builds up to the invenitable moment. Then there is