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To: John Lenin
You have no class, were you born in a trailer park ?

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001.

black humor

in literature, drama, and film, grotesque or morbid humor used to express the absurdity, insensitivity, paradox, and cruelty of the modern world. Ordinary characters or situations are usually exaggerated far beyond the limits of normal satire or irony. Black humor uses devices often associated with tragedy and is sometimes equated with tragic farce. For example, Stanley Kubrick’s film Dr. Strangelove; or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1963) is a terrifying comic treatment of the circumstances surrounding the dropping of an atom bomb, while Jules Feiffer’s comedy Little Murders (1965) is a delineation of the horrors of modern urban life, focusing particularly on random assassinations. The novels of such writers as Kurt Vonnegut, Thomas Pynchon, John Barth, Joseph Heller, and Philip Roth contain elements of black humor.

23 posted on 12/20/2002 5:23:01 PM PST by Plutarch
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To: Plutarch
I gotta say you're trying to dress up an old whore with new clothes there. Sorry, your post was in pretty bad taste.
42 posted on 12/20/2002 8:17:44 PM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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