Diablerie
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[[Diablerie]] is a genre of [[French satire]], often by extreme [[exaggeration]]. Diablerie stems from [[diable]], which is French for [[devil]]. The 1978 book ''[[Diableries : La Vie Quotidienne Chez Satan a la Fin du 19e Siecle]]'' documents certain [[diorama]]s within the genre. Poitevin is famous for his ''[[Les Diableries Erotiques]]''. | [[Diablerie]] is a genre of [[French satire]], often by extreme [[exaggeration]]. Diablerie stems from [[diable]], which is French for [[devil]]. The 1978 book ''[[Diableries : La Vie Quotidienne Chez Satan a la Fin du 19e Siecle]]'' documents certain [[diorama]]s within the genre. Poitevin is famous for his ''[[Les Diableries Erotiques]]''. | ||
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+ | Diableries illustrate how -- before the "invention" of erotica and pornography -- [[body part]]s and the people possessing them were used for subversive purposes, here as a form of [[satirical pornography or pornographic satire]]. The genre goes back to [[Rabelais]], although his masterpiece ''[[Gargantua and Pantagruel]]'' was more [[emetic]] than [[erotic]]. | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
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Diablerie is a genre of French satire, often by extreme exaggeration. Diablerie stems from diable, which is French for devil. The 1978 book Diableries : La Vie Quotidienne Chez Satan a la Fin du 19e Siecle documents certain dioramas within the genre. Poitevin is famous for his Les Diableries Erotiques.
Diableries illustrate how -- before the "invention" of erotica and pornography -- body parts and the people possessing them were used for subversive purposes, here as a form of satirical pornography or pornographic satire. The genre goes back to Rabelais, although his masterpiece Gargantua and Pantagruel was more emetic than erotic.
See also
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