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




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Diablerie" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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