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For more than two thousand years we have known satirists as those
wits who expose hypocrisy and deftly stick shafts into our
ballooned egos. Collectively we resent this perspicacity-satirists
are never much liked. We give them their due, however, by admiring
their ability to make us laugh while they make us squirm.
Introduction to Satire explains fully how the satirist manages to
express his criticism in forms that society is willing to accept-in
spite of the fact that no one likes to be criticized. New
introduction by Don L. F. Nilsen, Historian. International Society
for Humor Studies.
Waking the Tiger is a novel set in late-1950s Sri Lanka, a country
at the edge of a gathering storm of violence. Feinberg weaves a
complex story of the clash between cultures and castes, expats and
ex-colonials, Hindu swamis and Buddhist priests, politicians and
entrepeneurs, Sinhalese and Tamils, idealism and realism. Filled
with vivid accounts of local customs and locales, Waking the Tiger
sardonically describes the underbelly of an apparent paradise.
Feinberg lived in Sri Lanka with his family from 1957-1958, when he
was Fulbright lecturer in American Literature at the University of
Ceylon.
This urbane, sardonic view of American culture is told from the
perspective of an extraterrestrial.
Please set UK price. I don't know the conversion figures.
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