鈥淎 good many studies of humour鈥, Terry Eagleton observes, 鈥渂egin with the shamefaced acknowledgment that to analyse a joke is to kill it dead.鈥 He robustly rejects this view: a joke is no more ruined by analysis than a poem. He nonetheless often seems strangely reluctant to examine specific pieces of wit very closely as he moves through theories of laughter and free-wheeling speculations on the relation of humour to history and to politics.
An account of a joke in which Bill Clinton and the Pope die on the same day, for example, is cited merely as an instance of blasphemy and so, in Freudian terms, a lifting of repression. Clinton is (rather meanly) consigned to hell and the Pope to heaven, but a bureaucratic error reverses their destinations. The next day, the error is corrected, and the two men converse briefly mid-journey, 鈥渢he Pope remarking on how eager he was to see the Virgin Mary, and Clinton informing him that he was just ten minutes too late鈥.
The play of wit here could be interpreted with reference to Mary Douglas鈥 argument (in an essay cited elsewhere in the book) that a joke 鈥渂rings into relation disparate elements in such a way that one accepted pattern is challenged by another which in some way was hidden in the first鈥. (This view is strongly supported by a punning dialogue that Eagleton includes: 鈥溾榃ould you like a bridal suite?鈥 a young man asks his bride-to-be while planning their honeymoon, to which she replies, 鈥楴o thanks, I鈥檒l just hang on to your ears.鈥欌) In its implicit opposition between eternity and Clinton鈥檚 casual 鈥渢en minutes鈥, the Pope-meets-Clinton narrative also prompts thoughts of Coleridge鈥檚 location of humour in 鈥渢he comparison of finite things with those which our imaginations cannot bound鈥. Either of these points of reference might have made the joke worth discussing further in the chapter on 鈥淚ncongruities鈥 鈥 which is, however, lively and full of unexpected scholarly snippets; it treats the problematic elasticity of the incongruity theory of humour as an opportunity to range over diverse variants of it, culminating in William Hazlitt鈥檚 鈥渦nexpected loosening or relaxing of鈥 stress鈥 at abrupt transitions that take the mind unawares.
The chapter on 鈥淪coffers and Mockers鈥 has an odder focus: as Eagleton notes, Thomas Hobbes鈥 view that we laugh to feel superior excludes playful or 鈥渄elightfully nonsensical鈥 concepts of humour. In response, he comes close to Georges Bataille鈥檚 view that, in laughing at the loss of 鈥渟ufficiency鈥 on the part of a 鈥渟erious character鈥, we also lose our own sufficiency and seriousness, and feel a consequent relief. A joking anecdote, here, features a protagonist whose very haplessness invites sympathy: an obscure vicar receives a letter asking him to give a radio talk, and specifying the fee as five pounds, at which he writes back 鈥渢o say that he would be delighted to deliver such a talk, and that he was enclosing his five pounds鈥.
糖心Vlog
Humour, then, is an enjoyable ramble, at its most engaging when drawn to the more anarchic aspects of laughter, citing Jacques Lacan鈥檚 claim that the value of a joke lies in the 鈥減ossibility to play on the fundamental non-sense of all usages of sense鈥.
Chloe Chard is an independent scholar who is writing a book on laughter, travel and art.
糖心Vlog
Humour
By Terry Eagleton
Yale University Press
192pp, 拢16.99
ISBN 9780300243147
Published 9 April 2019
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