Funny Peculiar

Regular price €44.99
A01=Mikita Brottman
Author_Mikita Brottman
Borscht Belt
Category=JMAF
Character Clown
Cheshire Cat
clowns
College Professors
Contemporary Society
Covert Sarcasm
dirty
Dirty Joke
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evil
Evil Clown
gershon
Gershon Legman
Giggle Incontinence
human
Human Laughter
Humor Consultant
Humor Therapists
Humor Therapy
jerry
joke
Kinsey Institute
laughter
Laughter Yoga
legman
Men's Laughter
Nathaniel Tarn
pathological
Pathological Laughter
Risus Sardonicus
Social Ragging
Teen Agers
Therapeutic Humor
White Face Clown
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780881634044
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Why are jokes funny? Why do we laugh? In Funny Peculiar, Mikita Brottman demurs from recent scholarship that takes laughter-- and the broader domain of humor and the comical--as a liberating social force and an endearing aspect of self-expression. For Brottman, there is nothing funny about laughter, which is less connected to mirth and feelings of good will than to a nexus of darker emotions: fear, aggression, shame, anxiety.

Brottman rethinks not only the mechanisms of humor but also the relation of humor to the body and the senses. To this end, she provides an engrossing account of the life and work of Gershon Legman, exiled author, publisher, and sexologist, Alfred Kinsey's first bibliographer, and legendary compiler of the dirty joke. Like Freud, Legman was convinced of the impossibility of understanding humor apart from sex, and Brottman shows how his two massive works on the subject, Rationale of the Dirty Joke and No Laughing Matter, provide a framework for understanding the ambivalent and often hostile impulses that underlie the comic impulse in its various guises. In lively and enlivening chapters, she traverses dirty jokes, the figure of the "evil clown" in popular culture, the current popularity of "humor therapy," changing fashions in stand-up comedy, and the connection between humor and horror. Brottman's sparkling prose, laced with wit, does not obscure the seriousness of Funny Peculiar. It is a thoughtful and wide-ranging elaboration of the Freudian claim that joking, in point of fact, is no laughing matter.

Mikita Brottman, Ph.D., who earned her doctorate at Oxford University, is Professor of Language and Literature at the Maryland Institute College of Art and a candidate at the Washington Square Institute for Psychotherapy and Mental Health (NYC).  She writes regularly for mainstream and alernative publications and is the author of three books on the horror film.