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Tudor and Stuart jest books were typically anonymous collections of individual jests in
English, a mix of verse and prose perhaps more comparable to the latter-day magazine than to a normal book. Some, however (following a German model), did attempt to link their jokes into a
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Advances in printing meant that quantitatively jestbooks reached their greatest circulation in the 17th and 18th centuries; but qualitatively their contents was increasingly either a repetition of earlier publications or an artificial imitation of what had in the
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The first
American jest book was published in 1787, and thereafter the genre flourished for some half a century, before giving way to the twin influence of censorship and the rise of the comic almanac.
118:. Playbooks and jestbooks were treated as forms of light entertainment, with jokes from the one being recycled in the other, and vice versa.
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63:(1451) that the anecdote first appears rendered down into joke form (with prominent punchline) in an early modern collection.
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in the 19th century completed the fall of the
English-language jest book from Elizabethan vitality to subsequent triviality.
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and humorous anecdotes in book form – a literary genre which reached its greatest importance in the
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pamphlets, fed into the early
English novels (or at least prose fiction) of writers like
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built up a large body of humorous tales; but it was only with the
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from the first millennium. In
Western Europe, the medieval
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The oldest surviving collection of jokes is the
Byzantine
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Vagrancy, Homelessness and
English Renaissance Literature
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Vagrancy, Homelessness and
English Renaissance Literature
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The low-life, realistic tone of the jest book, akin to
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French jestbooks were widely drawn on in the work of
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126:jest book been a genuine folk content.
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87:sort of narrative around one, often
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66:Like his immediate successors
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425:(1973) Vol 1 p. 28 and p. 46
423:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
399:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
386:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
334:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
258:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
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232:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
206:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
193:Rationale of the Dirty Joke
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150:as a prominent character.
349:(1973) p. 73 and p. 126
174:Shakespeare's Jest Book
375:(2006) p. 39 and p. 58
360:The Age of Shakespeare
347:The Age of Shakespeare
321:The Age of Shakespeare
295:The Age of Shakespeare
219:The Age of Shakespeare
470:Shakespeare Jestbooks
78:Elizabethan jestbooks
49:and the Arab/Italian
23:) are collections of
373:The Book of the Play
468:W. C. Hazlitt ed.,
134:Parallel traditions
29:early modern period
483:Jestbooks (London)
463:Anecdota Americana
401:(1973) Vol 1 p. 28
388:(1973) Vol 1 p. 27
336:(1973) Vol 1 p. 77
306:Linda Woodbridge,
280:Linda Woodbridge,
260:(1973) Vol 1 p. 25
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195:(1973) Vol 1 p. 27
461:Joseph Fliesler,
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472:3vol (1864)
421:G. Legman,
397:G. Legman,
384:G. Legman,
332:G. Legman,
256:G. Legman,
243:G. Legman,
230:G. Legman,
204:G. Legman,
191:G. Legman,
124:Elizabethan
116:Shakespeare
492:Categories
435:Jest books
411:Jest books
270:Jest books
180:References
85:picaresque
42:Philogelos
21:jestbooks
17:Jest book
158:See also
141:Rabelais
56:Facetiae
112:Marlowe
89:roguish
51:novella
47:fabliau
35:Origins
503:Humour
465:(1927)
61:Poggio
19:s (or
508:Jokes
25:jokes
114:and
106:and
70:and
59:of
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