Laughter in Ancient Rome

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Laughter in Ancient Rome Page 44

by Mary Beard


  Dionysius II (tyrant of Syracuse), flatterers of, 151

  Dionysius of Halicarnassus, on Tarentines, 220n10

  the dishonorable, laughter at, 125

  dogs: anthropomorphization of, 47; laughter of, 24, 47; rictus of, 260n16

  Domitian, Emperor: offense at jokes, 132

  Domitius Ahenobarbus, 101

  Domitius Marsus, on urbanitas, 124

  Donatus, Aelius: commentary on The Eunuch, 12, 13, 221n30, 222n38, 223n47

  donkeys: ancient varieties of, 266n100; fatal laughter at, 176–78, 179, 180; transformation into, 178

  donkeys, dining, 266nn106,112; laughter at, 177, 178, 179–80, 265n91; reactions of, 267n113

  double entendres: Cicero on, 117; Quintilian on, 99–100

  Douglas, Mary, 42, 43, 230n72; “Do Dogs Laugh?,” 47; essay on jokes, 273n54; on Pygmy laughter, 45

  dreams: interpretation of, 273n57; jokes on, 197; versus reality, 273n56; in Roman culture, 197–98

  Dupont, F., 250n82

  Du Quesnay, I. M. LeM., 241n52

  Eco, Umberto: The Name of the Rose, 30, 34, 220n17, 225n26

  effeminacy, jokes on, 106

  Ekman, Paul, 233n18

  Elagabalus, Emperor: banquets of, 149; jocularity of, 144, 154; laughter of, 77, 128; murder by scurrae, 154; pranks of, 128–29, 132, 142, 147, 148, 231n4

  Elias, N., 234n29

  elites, Roman: household jesters of, 145, 146, 256n66; laughter of, 4, 115, 129, 130, 154; participation in Saturnalia, 236n49; relationship with jesters, 155; self-fashioning by, 135, 146

  emotion, facial expressions of, 75, 233n18

  emperors, Roman: bad, 132; civilitas of, 130, 131; control of laughter, 134–35; interactions with subjects, 135–36, 140; jokes of, ix, 140–42, 252n3; toleration of joking, 130, 131; use of laughter, 129–35

  Ennius, 133; “hahae” of, 16, 223n52; jokes about, 200, 270n23; puns on monkeys, 162

  envoys, Roman: Tarentines’ laughter at, 4, 6, 220n10

  epigrams, scoptic, 271n40, 273n56

  ethnicity: in laughter, 45, 51–52, 89; in modern jokes, 191

  eunuchs, in Roman comedy, 9

  Eunus, slave revolt of, 152

  Evanthius, on mime, 170

  evil eye, averting of, 256n71

  facetiae (wit), 228n48; Cicero on, 111, 113, 114; divisions of, 111. See also jokes, Roman; wit, Roman

  facial gestures, universality of, 75

  family life, jokes on, 198

  Fantham, Elaine, 35, 167, 254n28, 263n59

  Favor (mime actor), 146

  Fellini, Federico: use of Apuleius, 182

  feminism, laughter in writings of, 36–37, 228n52

  Fescennine verses, 68, 238nn64,67

  Festus, On the Meaning of Words, 172–73, 264n73

  Fick-Michel, N., 266n101

  figs, erotic associations of, 177, 265n95

  Flamininus, Lucius Quinctius: joking by, 80–81; maiestas of, 79–81

  flatterers. See parasites

  Floridi, L., 271n40

  Fontaine, Michael, 56, 195

  food, relationship to deception, 148, 256n75

  Fortunate Isles, springs of, 26, 224n9

  Fowler, Don, 258n98

  Fraenkel, Eduard, 90, 222n37, 243n72; on scurrilitas, 153

  Frangoulidis, S., 222n39

  Frazer, James: Golden Bough, 63

  Freedberg, David, 233n18

  Freud, Sigmund, 131; on the comic, 41; on displacement, 222n41; favorite joke of, 214, 276n6; on ideation, 230n66; Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious, 12, 38, 39, 42, 229n61; on mechanism of laughter, 40; relief theory of, 38, 41; Wittgenstein’s critique of, 229n64

  Freudenburg, K., 225n23

  funerals, Roman: jesters at, 146

  Gabba (court jester), 143, 255n49

  Galen, 86; on apes and monkeys, 165–66; dissection of apes, 27, 224n14; on laughter, 27. Works: On Problematical Movements, 23; On the Usefulness of Parts of the Body, 165

  Galli (priests), 9

  games, Roman: theatrical performances within, 221n23

  Gatrell, Vic, 61, 62, 229n64

  gelan (laugh), 3; etymology of, 231n81; uses of, 239n12

  geloion (joke), 76, 207; in Plutarch, 153

  Gelon (laughing spring), 25–26

  gelōs (laughter), 3; and risus, 48

  gelotophyllis (laughter leaves), identity of, 25, 28–29, 224n8

  Germans, ancient: laughter of, 52

  Gibson, R., 259n8

  giggling, 259nn5–6; Dio’s, 1–8, 43, 53, 128; women’s, 3, 157, 219n7

  Gildenhard, Ingo, 241n49, 246n20, 249n61, 251n91

  gods: anthropomorphic statues of, 175; laughter of, 136–37, 159, 169, 254n28

  Godwin, John, 171

  Goldhill, Simon, 223n48, 245n3

  The Goodies, laughing to death at, 177

  Gorgons, laughter of, 36, 57

  Gospel of Jesus, laughter in, 228n45

  Gowers, Emily, 68, 256n73; on Saturnalia, 236n49

  Graf, F., 248n41

  Grant, M. A., 248n46, 250n67

  Greek language: Roman laughter in, 85–95; vocabulary for laughter, 6, 71, 76, 207

  Greeks, Alexandrian: mocking of Jews, 141, 142, 254n44

  Green, P., 258n93

  Gruen, Erich, 211–12, 243n72

  Guérin, C., 247n33, 249n56

  Habinek, T., 267n124

  Hadrian, Emperor: interactions with subjects, 135–36, 253n23

  hahahae (interjection), 8; in The Eunuch, 9, 12, 14, 16, 90, 107

  Hall, E., 262n50

  Halliwell, Stephen, 73, 233n21; on agelasts, 265n89; on animal laughter, 253n27; on Democritus, 92; on giggling, 259n5; Greek Laughter, x, 88; on philosophy of laughter, 228n49; on self-reflexivity, 223n50; on Spartan laughter, 244n85; on Xenophon, 257n81

  Hals, Frans: The Laughing Cavalier, 57

  Hannibal, jokes of, 78

  Harpaste (clown), 145, 256n67

  Hassan, Margaret, 233n18

  Heath, J. R., 266n109

  Hekster, O., 221n22

  Henderson, John, 252n107

  Hercules: attack on Stymphalian birds, 219n1, 220n18; dramatic interpretation of, 170

  Herodas, use of kichlizein, 219n8

  herons, laughter of, 34, 227n43

  Herzen, Alexander, 49, 65, 231n1

  Hierokles, association with Philogelos, 188, 269n11

  Hippocrates, fictional accounts of, 92–93

  Hobbes, Thomas: Nietzsche on, 45; theory of superiority, 41. Works: The Elements of Law, 37; Leviathan, 41

  Homer, use of meidiao, 73

  Horace: on Democritus, 244n84; on Fescennine verses, 68, 238n64; on Greek culture, 87; on Sarmentus, 153, 255n48; Satires, 81, 153, 204; Saturnalia in, 64, 235n46; style of laughter, 68; use of ridere, 72

  House of the Dioscuri (Pompeii), 261n34

  House of the Tragic Poet (Pompeii), 234n25; CAVE CANEM mosaic, 58, 59

  human-animal boundary: in The Golden Ass, 160, 167, 183; Roman laughter at, 159–60, 164–67, 174, 178, 259n11

  humorlessness, Victorian, 67

  Hunter, R. L., 262n52

  Hutchinson, Gregory, 105

  Hylas (pantomime actor), 79

  identity: construction through wit, 247n29; jokes about, 199–200; proof of, 201, 273n67

  Ik (mountain people), 231n79

  imitation: aggressive forms of, 263n62; danger for orators, 250n80; Galen on, 165–66; monkeys’, 161–62, 163–64; observers’ perception of, 164–65; in Roman laughter, 58, 78, 160, 173, 174. See also mimicry

  impersonation: in ancient theater, 170; in Roman laughter, 78

  incongruity, laughter at, 28, 38, 40, 59, 81, 117, 175–76, 230n68, 241n50

  invective, Roman, 41–42; Cicero’s use of, 120, 123; rhetoric of, 247n26

  irridere (to laugh), 71

  Isaac (the patriarch), laughter of, 233n22

  Isidore, on spleen, 224n6

  Isis, in The Golden Ass, 178

  James,
P., 267n124

  Janko, Richard, 31

  Jerome, Saint: on Crassus the agelast, 176, 265n91; use of cachinnare, 266n98

  jesters: Greek slaves, 152; as monkeys, 166. See also jokers

  jesters, Roman: in elite households, 145, 146, 256n66; at imperial court, 142–47, 255n49, 256nn63–64; joke collections of, 193; at Vespasian’s funeral procession, 146, 256n72

  Jesus, laughter of, 34, 81, 228n45

  Jews, Alexandrian: delegation to Caligula, 140–42, 254n42; mockery of, 141, 142, 254n44

  Joe Miller’s Jests, 212–13, 276n3

  Johnson, Samuel: on laughter, 11, 222n36; and Philogelos joke, 186, 213, 268n5

  jokebooks: Hellenistic, 204, 207; refinement of, 66; Renaissance, 275n2

  jokebooks, Greek: evidence for, 203, 204, 274n74

  jokebooks, Roman, 201–5; Cicero’s jokes in, 104; parasites’, 149–50, 193, 202–3, 205. See also Philogelos

  jokers: as butt of jokes, 120, 125; consequences of jokes for, 107; vulnerability of, 76. See also jesters

  jokers, Roman: cultural ideology surrounding, 129, 146–47; murder of, 253n12

  jokes: abusive, 32; aggressive, 123; analysis of, 28; apotropaic, 146; Arabic, 212; commodification of, 205–8, 209; definition of, 205; emotional release through, 38–39; ethics of, 27; incomprehensible, 15; as intellectual devices, 197; Jewish, 213; nationalistic, 270n30; in Nicomachean Ethics, 32; old, 131, 213–14, 223n49; psychological aspects of, 197–98; reassuring, 247n28; social function of, 197; successful, 28; swapping of, 205; threesomes in, 186; unique properties of, 205; in wartime, 38, 101–2, 104, 229n60, 246n20. See also wit

  jokes, ancient: ethnic preferences in, 89; Greek versus Roman, 206, 207; invention of, 205, 208–9, 212; lost points of, 195–96, 272n45; modern retelling of, 18–19; offensive to moderns, 195, 272n53; purchase of, 207. See also Philogelos; scholastikos jokes

  jokes, Greek: anthologies of, 203–4; in The Eunuch, 89–91; Roman adaptation of, 89–91

  jokes, Roman, x; attributed to Cicero, 104, 105; bad, 56, 186; bad-tempered, 116–17, 120; bequest to Western culture, 208, 212; on bodily peculiarities, 106, 120, 121, 231n4; Caesar’s soldiers’, 146, 231n4; Cicero’s, 78, 101–5, 124, 126–27, 153, 202, 212, 245n5, 246n14, 270n23, 275n2; commodification of, 208; in culinary economy, 148; deception in, 125–26; domestic anthropology of, 201; effect of rhetoric on, 208; on effeminacy, 106; Elagabalus’s, 77; emperors’, ix, 140–42, 252n3; of The Eunuch, 9–12, 14, 18, 176–77, 205, 222n37; at expense of friendship, 76, 240n27; failed, 125; famous persons in, 200; great men’s, 105; versus Greek jokes, 206, 207; histories of, 17; illumination of Roman culture, 196; inappropriate, 101–2, 123, 131, 231n4, 252n11; jokers as butt of, 120; mangled, 123; mimes’, 103; modern reconstruction of, 49, 54–56, 195, 212, 213, 232nn13,14, 272n49; objects of, 19; old, 13, 15, 78, 200; origins of, 208; practical, 77; Quintilian on, 54–56, 123–26, 232nn11,13; rhetoricians on, 28; of scurrae, 103, 118, 121, 124, 152; on the Senate, 131; sexual overtones in, 12, 271n40, 273n61; suggestibility for moderns, 212; on thieving slaves, 117, 123; tyrants’, 129, 130; vocabulary for, 76; women’s, 156. See also Macrobius, Saturnalia; Philogelos

  joke writers, professional, 205

  Jones, Christopher, 75

  Joubert, Laurence, 229n64

  Joyce, James: representation of laughter, 36, 228n50

  Julia (daughter of Augustus): exile of, 156, 259n3; jokes of, 78, 156, 259n3; jokes on, 133

  Juvenal, puns in, 258n88

  Kant, Immanuel: on incongruity, 38

  Kassel, Rudolf, 204

  Kaster, Robert, 73–74; on smiling, 239n16

  katagelaō (to laugh at), 150

  Kerman, J. B., 273n54

  Khlebnikov, Velimir, x

  kichlizein (to giggle), 3, 259n5; erotics of, 219n8. See also giggling

  Kidd, S., 222n34

  Kindt, Julia, 175, 265n87

  King, A., 261n32

  Kirichenko, Alexander, 183, 264n64, 267n124; on actor et auctor, 268n129

  kissing, ancient, 75, 240n23

  kouroi, archaic smiles of, 57

  Kristeva, Julia: on laughter of babies, 85, 242n62

  Kroll, W. M., 249n65

  Krostenko, B. A., 115, 247n29; on typology of wit, 250n67

  Kurke, Leslie, 138, 254nn31,34

  Kyme, jokes about, 191–92, 199, 201, 271n31

  Laberius: Anna Peranna, 169, 263n57; Cicero’s joke at, 246n14; mimes of, 168

  La Bua, G., 267n127

  Laes, C., 256n63

  Latin language: Roman laughter in, 70–73; smiles in, 73–76

  the laughable, 5; Aristotle on, 32; categories of, 109–10, 112; cultural determinants of, 59; fault in, 32–33; Greek books on, 110; lost treatises on, 226n32; in On the Orator, 109–10; versus the ridiculous, 220n14; in Roman culture, 103; sources of, 117

  laughers: Commodus’s execution of, 132; consequences of jokes for, 107; versus laughed at, 181, 184, 268n130; sense of inferiority, 41; sincerity of, 151

  laughter: anti-totalitarian, 5, 30, 220n17; Aristotle on, 32–34, 40, 220n9, 227n40; of babies, 25, 35, 36, 83, 84, 85; bestial, 158, 159, 160; biblical, 238n68; biological origins of, 37; canine, 24, 47; canned, 230n72; carnivalesque, 60, 61–62, 223n48; causes of, 16, 24, 28–29, 33, 183, 222n36; changing patterns of, 48, 59–60, 65–69; children’s, 44, 230n75; Christian discourse of, x, 155; continuity in rituals of, 237n59; corrective, 40; and cultural discourse of laughter, 66; diachronic histories of, 65, 66, 67, 69; discursive complexity of, 58; disguised, 5; effect of social hierarchy on, 28; ethics of, 27; fatal, 14, 172–74, 176–78, 180, 265n92; feminist, 36–37, 228n52; Galen on, 23; gestures accompanying, 44; history of, 48, 49–50, 65, 208, 234n27; as human property, 29, 32, 33, 34, 46, 47, 137, 159, 227n44; interpretation of, 7, 17; inversionary, 60; isolating, 15; Jewish debates on, x; manifestations for audiences, 42; manifestations for laughers, 42; as marker of disruption, 44, 60, 67, 77, 116, 118, 142, 196–97; medieval, 61, 62, 233n22; metaphorical use of, 46; as metaphor of communication, 84; at mimicry, 112, 119, 160; misunderstanding of, 17; modern studies of, 29, 36–37; neuroscience of, 24, 29, 48, 212, 229n62; at oneself, 18, 19; organs responsible for, 25, 29; within and outside text, 180, 181; physical nature of, 16, 23, 27, 39, 47, 107, 116, 158, 222n42, 229n64; political aspects of, 7; practice/protocol of, 49–50, 66, 67, 231n2; prompted by ridicule, 33; proper and improper uses of, 44, 49, 230n75; proverbs about, 76; Pygmies’, 45–46; reassuring, 247n28; refinement of, 67–68; relationship to objects of laughter, 16, 76, 160, 170–72, 181, 184; relationship to power, x, 3–4, 6; in religious, 60; rhetoric of, 44; role of memory in, 15; Roman intellectuals on, ix; scientific discussions of, 46; self-reflexivity of, 223n50; shared, 15; social, 40, 229n62, 230n72, 247n29; social determinants of, 27–28, 43, 65; social regulation of, 43–44; at someone/thing, 7, 221n20; Soviet scholars on, 234n33; stifled, 2–3, 5, 6, 7; stimulation of, 224n17; in theological texts, 238n68; in time of trouble, 245n9; as unitary phenomenon, 42, 230n71; universal psychology of, 53, 61; written representations of, 11, 36, 222n35

  laughter, ancient: Alexandrian, 51–52; caused by wounds, 26, 224n10; chemically induced, 52; at elderly women, 173; erotics of, 241n45; ethnic differences in, 51–52; between master and slave, 137–39; origin of, 111; Peripatetic school on, 110; philosophical tradition on, 110; visual images of, 49, 56–59, 162–63, 165, 166, 233n24

  laughter, derisory, 5, 106; association with Aristotle, 29, 33, 227n40; Dio’s, 14; Quintilian on, 28, 37; Roman, 17; Tarentines’, 4, 6, 220n10; victims of, 37

  laughter, English: early, 50, 59–60, 66; eighteenth-century, 66, 237nn58,62; vocabulary for, 71

  laughter, French: royal versus revolutionary, 237n62

  laughter, Greek: Demosthenes’ use of, 102, 103; modern comprehension of, 54; nuanced images of, 227n41; at Roman dress, 4; and Roman laughter, ix, 35, 69, 86, 88, 203, 207–8; Roman side of, 91–95; Spartan, 93–94, 244n85; terminology of, 239n14; vocabulary of, 6, 71, 76, 207

  laugh
ter, nineteenth-century: modern comprehension of, 53

  laughter, past, 50–56; changing registers of, 67; inherited conventions of, 54; modern comprehension of, 52–56; repeating patterns of, 67; Roman reflections on, 50; systematization of, 70

  laughter, Roman: at abuse of power, 3–4, 220n10; across social hierarchies, 135–40; ancient authors on, 69; apotropaic, 58, 146, 234n25, 256n70; in art, 57–59; association with prostitutes, 80; Augustan, 69; Bakhtin and, 50; at bodily transgression, 51; Caligula’s coercing of, 6, 134; changes in, 68–69; circumstances of, 16; consequences of, 107; controlling, 133–34; control over, 43; in culinary economy, 148; cultural geography of, 191; in Declamationes, 79–81; derisive, 17; diachronic history of, 69; as diagnostic of villainy, 77; Dio’s accounts of, 1–8; discursive tropes of, 140; elites’, 4, 88, 89, 115; between emperors and subjects, 135–36, 140–42; emperors’ control of, 134–35; emperors’ use of, 129–35; excessive, 77; exclusionary/inclusionary, 17; facilitation of communications, 136; faked and real, 17; false certainties in, 83; flatterers’, 141, 150–51; geography of, 51; between gods and mortals, 136–37; in Greek, 85–95; and Greek laughter, ix, 35, 69, 86, 88, 203, 207–8; at human-animal boundary, 159–60, 164–67, 174, 178, 259n11; humiliating, 77; illusion in, 58; imitation in, 58, 78, 160, 173, 174; of imperial court, 129; impersonation in, 78; inappropriate, 51, 80; incongruity in, 81, 117, 241n50; in Latin language, 70–73; linguistic rules of, 82; in literature, 70–73, 136, 140, 157; in master-slave relations, 137–40; at mime, 160, 169–71; modern comprehension of, 4, 18, 52–56, 75, 211–12; nonelite, 87–88, 193; old-style, 68–69, 78, 237n63; policing functions of, 232n6; prohibitions concerning, 51, 123; protocols of, 51, 77, 82, 142; public, 100, 115, 241n46; at puns, 118; relationship to mimicry, 263n62; relationship to power, 3–4, 17, 77, 106, 128–29, 197, 220n10, 252n2; rhetorical uses of, 28, 54–55; ribald, 68; scripted, 8–17, 223n51; signals implied by, 81; slogans of, 76; social reality of, 140; sociolinguistic rules governing, 83; spontaneous, 4, 16, 39, 43, 127; through comparison, 252n9; transgressive, 241n46; truth and falsehood in, 125–26, 129; understanding of, 17–19, 70; and verbal jokes, 6; in Virgil’s fourth Eclogue, 81–85; vocabulary in Latin, 71–73; written representations of, 11, 59, 222n35. See also jokes, Roman; wit, Roman

  laughter, Roman oratorical, 19, 54, 99–100, 105–9; aggressive, 120–23; anxieties concerning, 124–25; backfiring of, 107–8, 118, 125; causes of, 107, 109, 111, 113, 115–19, 124, 170; Cicero’s use of, 95; the dishonorable in, 125; objects of, 116; in On the Orator, 28, 35, 107–8, 109–23, 212, 223n1, 225n23; questions concerning, 109, 111; relationship to mimicry, 119, 160, 167–72; risks of, 115–20; as Roman cultural product, 110–11; in Roman literature, 240n26; rules for, 112–13, 117, 120–21, 122. See also wit, Roman oratorical

 

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