The satire over time
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24310/analecta.v40i.10409Keywords:
Literature, Philology, Literary theory, Satire, History of ideasAbstract
In a chronological way and with support from literary sources, this paper looks upon the most important theories developed in attention to satire, since Antiquity to our days. It is a critical view on these authors who, across history, had expressed relevant ideas or elaborated theoretical models about satiric literature; this, with the intention of precise a comprehensive analitic frame to aproximate to particular works of this type.
Downloads
Metrics
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
In the Analecta Malacitana Journal we are clearly committed to a policy of open access to scientific knowledge (See the Berlin Declaration).
Those authors who have publications with this journal accept the following terms:
This journal provides immediate free access to its content on the principle of making research freely available to the public. All content published on Margins is subject to the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives 4.0 International license.
It is the responsibility of the authors to obtain the necessary permissions of the images that are subject to copyright.
Authors whose contributions are accepted for publication in this journal will retain the non-exclusive right to use their contributions for academic, research, and educational purposes, including self-archiving or deposit in open access repositories of any kind.
The electronic edition of this magazine is edited by the Editorial of the University of Malaga (UmaEditorial), being necessary to cite the source in any partial or total reproduction.
The authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements for the distribution of the version of the published work (for example: deposit it in an institutional telematic archive or publish it in a monographic volume) provided that the initial publication in this magazine.
Authors are allowed and recommended to disseminate their work through the Internet (for example: in institutional telematic archives or on their web page) before and during the submission process, which can produce interesting exchanges and increase citations to the published work. (See The effect of open access.)