Difference between revisions of "Travesty"

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[[Travesty]] (or '''Travestie''' as it is sometimes spelled in older texts) is a term which has demonstrated a vast range and shift in meaning over the years. As a literary and artistic term , it ranges from the notion of "a literary or artistic [[burlesque]] of a serious work or subject, characterized by grotesque or ludicrous incongruity of style, treatment, or subject matter" to the more negative definition as "a literary or artistic composition so inferior in quality as to be merely a grotesque imitation of its model" (''Dictionary.com''[http://www.dictionary.com/browse/travesty?]).
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[[Travesty]] (or '''[[Travestie]]''' as it is sometimes spelled in older texts) is a term which has demonstrated a vast range and shift in meaning over the years. As a literary and artistic term , it ranges from the notion of "a literary or artistic [[burlesque]] of a serious work or subject, characterized by grotesque or ludicrous incongruity of style, treatment, or subject matter" to the more negative definition as "a literary or artistic composition so inferior in quality as to be merely a grotesque imitation of its model" (''Dictionary.com''[http://www.dictionary.com/browse/travesty?]).
  
 
In a more general sense it is often found today in the meaning of "a crude, distorted, or ridiculous representation (of something)", as in the expression "a travesty of justice"(''Webster's New World College Dictionary''[http://www.yourdictionary.com/travesty#vzkz60Bki4d0o5YA.99]).  
 
In a more general sense it is often found today in the meaning of "a crude, distorted, or ridiculous representation (of something)", as in the expression "a travesty of justice"(''Webster's New World College Dictionary''[http://www.yourdictionary.com/travesty#vzkz60Bki4d0o5YA.99]).  

Latest revision as of 06:19, 24 May 2019

Travesty (or Travestie as it is sometimes spelled in older texts) is a term which has demonstrated a vast range and shift in meaning over the years. As a literary and artistic term , it ranges from the notion of "a literary or artistic burlesque of a serious work or subject, characterized by grotesque or ludicrous incongruity of style, treatment, or subject matter" to the more negative definition as "a literary or artistic composition so inferior in quality as to be merely a grotesque imitation of its model" (Dictionary.com[1]).

In a more general sense it is often found today in the meaning of "a crude, distorted, or ridiculous representation (of something)", as in the expression "a travesty of justice"(Webster's New World College Dictionary[2]).

See also burlesque and extravaganza

Sources

"Travesty" in Dictionary.com (at http://www.dictionary.com/browse/travesty?)

"Travesty" in The Free Dictionary (at http://www.thefreedictionary.com/travesty)

"Travesty" in Webster's New World College Dictionary (cited in Your Dictionary at http://www.yourdictionary.com/travesty#vzkz60Bki4d0o5YA.99)


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