Tuesday, 8 November 2016

"Art and Laughter" by Sheri Klein is a very informative book for the subject I'm dealing with.  Between pages 16 and 18 it splits humour different categories and clearly defines all of them.  Now it's not just humour I'm working with.  Its parody, satire, puns, irony, paradox and dark humour.  Below I list the definitions in the book along with my own simplified definitions.


Parody
"Parodies gently mock art, cultural and historical icons through appropriating and altering images, and layering them with new meanings” (Page 13).


In other words, parodies are slightly altered icons which trigger a humorous response because they portray a different meaning to the original.  Often at times we can’t laugh at the original because it’s too serious or too well respected.  An example of a parody would be the Mona Lisa with a mustache.  This evokes a humorous response because it’s such a famous and respected painting.  Drawing a mustache takes all the seriousness out of it.
Satire
“Visual satire mocks art and life with zest and fury and asks us to pay attention to social norms, standards, morals and human foibles.  The visual satirist mimics the knowledge and behaviour of a culture or group to overemphasize and exaggerate aspects of life and its foibles with the hope of provoking laughter or a change in attitudes or ways” (page 16). 


In other words, satire uses the enforcement function of humour here in an attempt to provoke laughter while also making people aware of the errors of our world and hopefully attempt to correct them through non-violence.
Pun
“A pun can be described as an image with two or more concurrent meanings resulting in the understanding of images on more than one level” (page 17). 


In other words, an image or caption with more than one meaning.  Eg.  I can’t think of a joke about beavers.  Dam.


The word dam is related to beavers because they create them in their environment while damn is also the word we say when we can’t think of something.  So the word dam is the source of amusement here as it carries more than one meaning here.


Irony
“Irony is enabled by using words or a combination of words and images to express something completely different from the literal meaning of the word or subject” (Page 18-19).


In other words, an ironic response is responding with the opposite answer expected to any given question or statement.  For example, if someone drops a glass and it smashes into shards on the ground and someone says “well done”, that’s an ironic response.  It’s typically use to mock someone or something.


Paradox
“Paradox is incongruity achieved through the juxtaposition of images, words and images, techniques, media and/or ideas, and at first they can seem false, but then we see the contradictions made apparent and the revealing of something true” (Page 18).


In other words, it’s a sentence that contradicts itself and at first doesn’t make sense, however it makes the reader think, leading them to discover some hidden truth to it.


For example, Oscar Wilde is famously quoted as saying “I can resist anything but temptation”.


Other examples include “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” or “I am nobody” and so on.


Dark Humour
“Dark humour relies on the effect of morbidity, absurdity and anarchy.  Dark humour confronts topics such as death, chaos, violence, disasters and personal crises.  It provokes laughter in the face of tragedy” (Page 19). 


In other words, dark humour allows us to make light of terrible situations we would normally be traumatised by or deeply affected by such as those listed above.  This kind of humour is often the source of offence for many people as they feel like there are some things we shouldn’t joke about.  Some artists on the other hand delight in using this kind of humour to trigger a response from the audience.  Artists listed in this book include Patty Carroll, Red Grooms, Shag (Josh Agle), Isabel Samaras and Saul Steinberg.
On page 19, the book talks about the various techniques which can be used to trigger a laughter response.
Techniques to Trigger Laughter (Page 19)
  • Association – Two images put together giving contrasting effects.
  • Transposition – Relocating something in an unusual or new environment.
  • Transformation – Altering of a form.
  • Exaggeration – Change or distortion of a subject.
  • Disguise – Subtle change or meaning.
  • Appropriation – Altering a borrowed image.
  • Contradiction – Paradoxical or ironic compositions.




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