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Ribaldry |
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Ribaldry Ridicule (See MOCKERY.) Decameron, The Boccaccio’s bawdy panorama of medieval Italian life. [Ital. Lit.: Bishop, 314–315, 380] Balzac’s Rabelaisian stories, told in racy medieval style and frequently gross. [Fr. Lit.: Contes Drolatiques in Benét, 222] Etrurian town noted for jesting and scurrilous verse (Fescennine verse). [Rom. Hist.: EB, TV: 112] Rabelais’s farcical and obscene 16th-century novel. [Fr. Lit.: Magill I, 298] tale of Lucius and his asininity, with a number of bawdy episodes. [Rom. Lit.: Apuleius Metamorphoses or The Golden Ass in Magill I, 309] scholar-poets interested mainly in earthly delights. [Medieval Hist.: Bishop, 292–293] girl who amused Demeter with bawdy stories. [Gk. Myth.: Howe, 136] ribald stories in verse, adapted from Boccaccio and others. [Fr. Lit.: Contes en Vers in Benét, 222] lusty story told by the drunken Miller. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales in Magill II, 131] Oswald the Reeve retaliates in kind to The Miller’s Tale. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales in Benét, 919] |
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| West made her reputation for gaminess in the early years of the last century by appropriating the dance moves she saw in black clubs and putting them on the vaudeville stage. Dixon embodied the gaminess and social chutzpa that marked early minstrelsy. Dixon embodied the gaminess and social chutzpa that marked early minstrelsy. |
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