Between Two Stools investigates the representation of scatology
- humorous, carnivalesque, satirical, damning and otherwise - in
English literature from the middle ages to the eighteenth century.
Smith contends that the 'two stools' stand for two broadly
distinctive attitudes towards scatology. The first is a
carnivalesque, merry, even hearty disposition, typified by the
writings of Chaucer and Shakespeare. The second is self-disgust, an
attitude characterised by withering misanthropy and hypochondria.
Smith demonstrates how the combination of high and low cultures
manifests the capacity to run canonical and carnivalesque together
so that sanctioned and civilised artefacts and scatological humour
frequently co-exist in the works under discussion, evidence of an
earlier culture's aptitude (now lost) to occupy a position between
two stools. Of interest to cultural and literary historians, this
ground-breaking study testifies to the arrival of scatology as an
academic subject, at the same time recognising that it remains if
not outside, then at least at the margins of conventional
scholarship.
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