Mind's Eye Re: Having a larf? Is humour cruel?

"Four Lions" is a brilliant piece mocking Islamic terrorism from all
sides. I rather like teasing humour and farce. I might almost be
your mocking friend - I'm insecure enough at times! Umbero Eco (Name
of the Rose) had the very existence of an Aristotle text on humour as
a threat to the Church. Our current religion is in need to mockery.
A system that encourages a vastly wealthy class hardly sounds like a
starting point for reasonable equality of opportunity! Etc.

On Feb 2, 12:11 pm, rigsy03 <rigs...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Satire is meant to bite- so it's not truly comedy, i.e. scorn versus
> merriement. Yes- I heard ethnic, racial, sexist jokes growing up but
> they were not mean-spirited then political correctness pounced though
> now the style in political and social humor is mockery>distain/
> contempt. I do like slapstick- another great was Sid Ceasar- also Mel
> Brooks  maybe Jewish humor derives from their tragic history, in part.
> As for Kierkegaard, I might have smiled if I could wade through his
> style- maybe I was not fair with K. One friend still reminds me of
> doing the right thing and is grateful that when a mutual "friend"
> thought the behavior of the "ex" in a messy divorce was hysterically
> funny I said this is her life and it is not funny at all- there is a
> lot of cruelty found in the "nicest" places sometimes. Another ex-
> friend is a great mocker- takes on accents and puts on a little show
> to illustrate her superiority over others and I don't doubt I am
> another on her list. But these type are just cruel and insecure.
>
> On Feb 1, 8:42 am, archytas <nwte...@gmail.com> wrote:
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> > My child hood was littered with jokes.  How do you keep an Irishman
> > busy all day - put him in a barrel and tell him to micturate in the
> > corner.  The Germans bombed our chip shop and had no sense of humour.
> > In France, the Belgians are the butt or "Irish"  jokes; elsewhere the
> > Poles.  Jokes often rely on 'taking the Micky' - ridiculing someone
> > else.  In Englishmen, Scotsmen and Irishmen jokes it was common for
> > the English and Scots to be the suckers to a sharp and cunning
> > Irishman.  Even the holocaust has been subject to joking - often by
> > the victims.
>
> > I have taught Kierkegaard as an example of dark, lengthy Danish humour
> > (and can point to books on same).  There is an affinity in his  work
> > with the Monty Python poverty joke in which each in turn recalls a
> > childhoods in greater poverty than the last.  Eventually, just as one
> > thinks the guy claiming to have lived in a shoebox on the central
> > reservation of the M6 has 'won' the game another bloke says,
> > "Shoebox?  You had a shoebox.  Luxury!"  Kierkegaard does this with
> > Christianity.
>
> > My own humour is dark, but it's rare I mean anyone harm.  I used to
> > think that satire offered some hope of change, but in recent years
> > have come to see it as merely part of the problems we have.  It is of
> > the Establishment and feigns resistance.
>
> > I think humour might be part of a way out of chronic illusion; but it
> > is often merely cruel and parochial.

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