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Informationen zum Autor Guy Halsall is Lecturer in History! Birkbeck College! University of London. His publications include Settlement and Social Organization: The Merovingian Region of Metz (Cambridge! 1995)! Early Medieval Cemeteries: An Introduction to Cemetery Archaeology in the Post-Roman West (Glasgow! 1995) and (ed) Violence and Society in the Early Medieval West (Woodbridge! 1997). Klappentext Essays on the use of humour by late antique and early medieval writers. Zusammenfassung These essays range from the late Roman empire through to the tenth century! and from Byzantium to Anglo-Saxon England! taking a historian's perspective to look at the use of irony! ridicule and satire as political tools. Inhaltsverzeichnis Notes on contributors; Preface; List of abbreviations; Introduction: 'Don't worry, I've got the key' Guy Halsall; Part I. The Fate of Humorous Writing: 1. Laughter and humour in the early medieval Latin west Danuta Schanzer; 2. Humour and the everyday in Byzantium John Haldon; Part II. Humour and the Politics of Difference: 3. The lexicon of abuse: drunkenness and political illegitimacy in the late Roman world Mark Humphries; 4. Funny foreigners: laughing with the barbarians in late Antiquity Guy Halsall; 5. Liutprand of Cremona's sense of humour Ross Balzaretti; Part III. Humour, History and Politics in the Carolingian World: 6. 'He never even allowed his white teeth to be bared in laughter': the politics of humour in the Carolingian renaissance Matthew Innes; 7. Alcuin's Disputatio Pippini and the early medieval riddle tradition Martha Bayless; 8. Laughter after Babel's fall: misunderstanding and miscommunication in the ninth-century west Paul Kershaw; Index.