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Laughter in Ancient Rome: On Joking, Tickling, and Cracking Up

de Mary Beard

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1952139,570 (3.71)1
"What made the Romans laugh? Was ancient Rome a carnival, filled with practical jokes and hearty chuckles? Or was it a carefully regulated culture in which the uncontrollable excess of laughter was a force to fear-a world of wit, irony, and knowing smiles? How did Romans make sense of laughter? What role did it play in the world of the law courts, the imperial palace, or the spectacles of the arena? Laughter in Ancient Rome explores one of the most intriguing, but also trickiest, of historical subjects. Drawing on a wide range of Roman writing-from essays on rhetoric to a surviving Roman joke book-Mary Beard tracks down the giggles, smirks, and guffaws of the ancient Romans themselves. From ancient 'monkey business' to the role of a chuckle in a culture of tyranny, she explores Roman humor from the hilarious, to the momentous, to the surprising. But she also reflects on even bigger historical questions. What kind of history of laughter can we possibly tell? Can we ever really 'get' the Romans' jokes?"--… (més)
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¿Qué hacía reír a los romanos? ¿Cómo entendían la risa? ¿Era la Antigua Roma una sociedad donde se prodigaban las bromas y los chistes? ¿O era una cultura cuidadosamente regulada en la que los excesos incontenibles de la risa suponían una fuerza a la que temer con su mundo de complicidades, ingenio mordaz e ironía? ¿Qué papel jugaba la risa en el mundo de los tribunales de justicia, el palacio imperial o los espectáculos circenses? La conocida historiadora Mary Beard, Premio Princesa de Asturias de Ciencias Sociales en 2016, analiza uno de los temas históricos más complejos: de qué y cómo se reían los antiguos romanos.
  bibliotecayamaguchi | May 9, 2022 |
This book is an expansion of Mary Beard’s Sather Lectures at Berkeley in 2008. The first section of the book discusses the knowability and comprehensibility of modern people understanding ancient laughter. Her argument boils down to this: if we Americans sometimes don’t get French or English jokes, how can anyone today understand what prompted laughter in an ancient Roman? Yet Professor Beard does not give up the quest to understand laughter both ancient and modern.

In the second half of the book, Professor Beard provides thoughtful analysis of what in fact made Romans laugh. From the scripted laughter in Roman comedy to Cicero’s reputation as a comic, to the narrow dividing line between someone who made a joke and that same someone who might be the butt of the joke, Professor Beard explores Roman “laughterhood”. With her erudition and trademark readability, Mary Beard has written an impressive work of social history. ( )
1 vota barlow304 | Jul 15, 2016 |
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I should begin this review by confessing that I have never liked scholarship on humor, ancient or otherwise. For me, the pleasure of understanding why I (or anyone) laughed is far outweighed by the pleasure of the laugh itself; I would rather enjoy the living joke than admire its dissected body. Fortunately, Mary Beard is sympathetic to this position, and opens her book with a clearly articulated and measured analysis of why we should — indeed, must — care about the nature of Roman laughter. One of the primary reasons is that the Romans themselves cared. They were, as it turns out, a very funny people, and it worried some of them. Primary among these worriers was Cicero, whose On the Orator, in Beard’s formulation, turns out to contain the closest thing we have to a systematic “theory of laughter” from antiquity — ingenious reconstructions of the lost second book of Aristotle’s Poetics notwithstanding. Another reason we should care about Roman laughter is that it is curiously resistant to interpretation: first, because it seems to exist at the nexus of a “natural”, bodily reaction — akin, as Pliny the Elder has it, to belching — and a social or cultural gesture; second, because that which provokes it sometimes seems very close to what we find funny in the modern West. In this sense, laughter masquerades as a phenomenon without a history. Beard, again, handles both of these issues with characteristic directness and aplomb, neither skirting their difficulty nor allowing them to overwhelm the book. Ultimately, this is a very sensible, readable, and useful volume, and although I might wish she had pushed her argument further in places, Beard’s delineation of what she terms the “laughterhood” of ancient Rome sheds a great deal of light on a very slippery subject.
 

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When I gave the Sather Lectures at Berkeley in the fall of 2008, I had the time of my life.
(Chapter 1)
COLOSSEUM, 192 CE

In 192 CE, a young Roman senator sitting in the front row of a show at the Colosseum in Rome could hardly restrain his laughter at what he saw.
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"What made the Romans laugh? Was ancient Rome a carnival, filled with practical jokes and hearty chuckles? Or was it a carefully regulated culture in which the uncontrollable excess of laughter was a force to fear-a world of wit, irony, and knowing smiles? How did Romans make sense of laughter? What role did it play in the world of the law courts, the imperial palace, or the spectacles of the arena? Laughter in Ancient Rome explores one of the most intriguing, but also trickiest, of historical subjects. Drawing on a wide range of Roman writing-from essays on rhetoric to a surviving Roman joke book-Mary Beard tracks down the giggles, smirks, and guffaws of the ancient Romans themselves. From ancient 'monkey business' to the role of a chuckle in a culture of tyranny, she explores Roman humor from the hilarious, to the momentous, to the surprising. But she also reflects on even bigger historical questions. What kind of history of laughter can we possibly tell? Can we ever really 'get' the Romans' jokes?"--

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