[Hardy-l] The grotesque in Hardy

segrmusic segr at segr-music.net
Tue Apr 1 07:58:02 PDT 2008


Looking at the French dictionary (not being French mind!)
for a derivation it would seem to imply surreal either in 
appearance or in behaviour.

Roy Buckle.

-----Original Message-----
From: Charles.Anesi at wellsfargo.com [mailto:Charles.Anesi at wellsfargo.com]
Sent: 01 April 2008 15:51
To: hardy-l at coyote.csusm.edu
Subject: RE: [Hardy-l] The grotesque in Hardy


OK, seems like a general treatment.  As a question for the entire group,
is there any generally accepted literary definition of "a grotesque
human character"?  By this I mean a definition that does not rely solely
on obvious physical characteristics.    


Chuck Anesi
charles.anesi at wellsfargo.com
office 480-575-3478
cell 612-940-3345
fax 480-575-3519
 
** These opinions are strictly my own and not necessarily those of Wells
Fargo **


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