Home > Shoeless Joe Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Shoeless Joe: Fantasy and the Humor of Fellow-Feeling
Shoeless Joe | Shoeless Joe: Fantasy and the Humor of Fellow-Feeling
In the following essay, Neil Randall explores the "fellow-feeling" of Kinsella's Shoeless Joe.
In his essay on Jean Paul Friedrich Richter, Thomas Carlyle writes of a humor that manifests itself in smile rather than laughter. "Richter is a man of mirth," says Carlyle, whose humor is "capricious … quaint … [and] heartfelt." The three adjectives represent for Carlyle the essence of what he terms "true humor" because they suggest Richter's enormous respect for humanity. "True humor," he goes on to say, "springs not more from the head than from the heart; it is not contempt, its essence is love; it issues not in laughter, but in still smiles, which lie far deeper." These...
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- Shoeless Joe: Introduction
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- Shoeless Joe: W. P. Kinsella Biography
- Shoeless Joe: Characters
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