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  2. Comedy of intrigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comedy_of_intrigue

    Cover to the Italian comedy of intrigue, The Deceived Ones (Italian: Gl'ingannati, 1531). The comedy of intrigue, also known as the comedy of situation, is a genre of comedy in which dramatic action is prioritised over the development of character, complicated strategems and conspiracies drive the plot, and farcical humour and contrived or ridiculous dramatic situations are often employed. [1]

  3. Intrigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrigue

    Halloween, intrigue is used in haunted attractions such as haunted houses and halloween theme park rides Roasting , comedic jabs and parodies or satire that features intrigue building All pages with titles containing Intrigue

  4. Cloak and dagger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloak_and_dagger

    Achille Marozzo's 16th century manual of arms illustration of the Dagger and Cloak "Cloak and dagger" was a fighting style common by the time of the Renaissance involving a knife hidden beneath a cloak.

  5. List of genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_genres

    This is a list of genres of literature and entertainment (film, television, music, and video games), excluding genres in the visual arts.. Genre is the term for any category of creative work, which includes literature and other forms of art or entertainment (e.g. music)—whether written or spoken, audio or visual—based on some set of stylistic criteria.

  6. Cabal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabal

    A French (translated into English) humorous image of a cabal. A cabal is a group of people who are united in some close design, usually to promote their private views or interests in an ideology, a state, or another community, often by intrigue and usually without the knowledge of those who are outside their group.

  7. Byzantinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantinism

    Byzantinism, or Byzantism, is the political system and culture of the Byzantine Empire, and its spiritual successors the Orthodox Christian Balkan countries of Greece and Bulgaria especially, and to a lesser extent Serbia and some other Orthodox countries in Eastern Europe like Belarus, Georgia, Russia and Ukraine.

  8. City comedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_comedy

    Emerging from Ben Jonson's late-Elizabethan comedies of humours (1598–1599), the conventions of city comedy developed rapidly in the first decade of the Jacobean era, as one playwright's innovations were soon adopted by others, such that by about 1605 the new genre was fully established. [1]

  9. Labor spying in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_spying_in_the_United...

    Labor spying in the United States had involved people recruited or employed for the purpose of gathering intelligence, committing sabotage, sowing dissent, or engaging in other similar activities, in the context of an employer/labor organization relationship.