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A joke is a short story or short series of words spoken or communicated with the intent of being laughed at or found humorous by the listener or reader. A practical joke differs in that the humour is not verbal, but mainly visual (e.g. putting a custard pie in somebody's face). Most jokes contain two components: joke setup (for example, "A man walks into a barw/.") and a punchline, which when juxtaposed with the setup provides the necessary irony to elicit laughter from the audience.
Psychology of jokesWhy we laugh has been the subject of serious academic study, examples being:
Laughter, the intended human reaction to jokes, is healthful in moderation, uses the stomach muscles, and releases endorphins, natural happinessnducing chemicals, into the bloodstream. One of the most complete and informative books on different types of jokes and how to tell them is Isaac Asimov's Treasury of Humor, which encompasses several broad categories of humor, and gives useful tips on how to tell them, who to tell them to, and ways to change the joke to fit your audience. Types of jokesJokes often depend for humour on the unexpected, the mildly taboo (which can include the distasteful or socially improper), or the playing on stereotypes and other cultural myths. Many jokes fit into more than one category. Yo' mama jokesMain article: The dozens. Jokes of this kind originate in the dozens, an African-American custom with West African roots in which two competitors -- usually males -- go head to head in a competition of comedic, often ribald, trash talk. The target of the traded insults is most often the opponents' mothers, but can involve other family members as well.
Political jokes
Political jokes tell about politicians and heads of states. There are two large categories of this type of jokes. The first one makes fun of a negative attitude to political opponents or to politicians in general. The second one makes fun of political cliches, mottos, catch phrases or simply blunders of politicians. Examples
The following joke circulates for quite some time, with many different versions for AND1lt;President> and AND1lt;Other Country>.
See alsoQuestion–answerOften posed as a common riddle, the answer is twisted humorously.
w/.and so on.
Why did the chicken cross the road?
Although perhaps the most famous of all jokes in the English language, this joke is a Non-joke, in that its humor value comes from the fact that it is expected to be funny. Additionally, it is rarely told on its own, but instead is referenced, modified, or parodied in a number of other jokes. One of the many wonderful word-plays on the television series M*A*S*H was spoken by Hawkeye when the power-mad Frank Burns ordered the entire unit to move just a few dozen yards for no reason at all: "Why is this chicken outfit crossing the road?"
Elephant jokesUsually a riddle of the form "Why did the elephantw/.?", where the answer is ridiculously impossible. Examples
However such jokes do not necessarily contain an elephant:
“What’s the Difference” jokesThe joke is set up with the question "What's the difference between two things that have apparently nothing in common?", and the punch line is a pun or Spoonerism in the form "One is (…) and the other is (…)" ExamplesThe set up: “What’s the difference between…
Jokes that require two peopleThese are double act jokes that need a straight man to give a predictable response to person telling the joke.
A significant subset of this kind of joke, geography jokes, is based around puns with geographical names. Examples
Dirty jokesHumor in dirty jokes is based on taboo, e.g., sexual, content or vocabulary. Many dirty jokes are also sexist. Many jokes from other categories are dirty. The effect of the dirty joke may be enhanced by the addition of further taboos, as in the subgenre of nun jokes.
The latter joke involves a pun (the word "wears" for "where's"), a sexual taboo, and a sacrilege. Another subgenre is that of unmet expectations, in which the joke is the absence of the dirty content which the audience has been led to expect in one way or another.
This joke is funny because the last word of the second line is expected to rhyme with the last word of the first. In such jokes, a dramatic pause is usually made before the punch word ("fist", in this case). Sick jokesA subgenre of jokes derives their humor simply from violating taboos and being so blatantly offensive in their subject matter that (for some) the situation becomes funny, not macabre. One example of such a joke is The Aristocrats, which dates back to Vaudeville. The phrase "sick jokes" appeared in the New York Times on October 9, 1958, when a football columnist noted that "those macabre 'sick jokes' that appeal to the younger generation are popping up in football quotes." An October 26 article on How These Joke Cycles Start, indicates that the "sick joke" genre was already well in progress. The columnist gives an example:
He states that "This body of humor first crawled out from under a stone in London five years ago when several British actors outlined plans for a never-to-be-produced show called The Bad Taste Review." In 1959 a Times columnist opined that "the tide of 'sick jokes' may be ebbing but Tom Lehrer's 'sick songs' are still at flood."
Dead body jokesThe 1980s and 1990s saw the vogue of the "dead body" joke, a subject which would usually be considered the opposite of "funny." A fair number of the jokes are derivations of each other, told in sequence for maximum effect. Others derive their humor from the implication that the teller knows from personal experience. The jokes took a new, more offensive, twist in the 1980s by changing "dead body" to "dead baby." Like most jokes, they are funnier when they are told rather than read:
Little Johnny jokesMain article: Little Johnny. Little Johnny jokes are about a small boy who likes to ask innocent questions and has a very straightforward thinking. At times he is all too well educated in the terminology of sex, then he is known as "Dirty Johnny", while at others he is all too innocent. He also has cousins across the world: Dirty Ernie, Spanish Jaimito, Mexican Pepito, Colombian Juanito and Benito, Portuguese and Brazilian Joãozinho, Russian Vovochka, Czech Pepíček, Italian Pierino, Estonian Juku, Slovenian Janezek, German Fritzchen, Finnish Pikku-Kalle, Croatian Perica, Romanian Bula, Dutch Jantje, French Toto, and Indian Chintu.
Ethnic jokesEthnic humor is particular to a certain ethnic group or culture and may or may not be the same as an ethnic joke. An ethnic joke relies for humorous effect on peculiarities of a particular ethnicity, real or imaginary. Many of them rely on stereotypes about particular ethnicities, often those from different (neighbour) nations or minorities. For example, Finns tell jokes about Swedes and Gypsies. Sometimes they are considered in good taste, meant to poke fun at or about another culture, while other times they are considered offensive or racist. Sometimes the difference between the two judgements is in the nature of the joke, and sometimes the difference is in the perception of those hearing it. In an attempt to preserve the humor of ethnic jokes without their derogatory nature, on rare occasions such jokes are told with the word ethnic or some variant in place of the nationality of the subject. For example: "Two ethnics are out duck hunting. They hunt and hunt and hunt and still have not killed one duck. Finally, ethnic #1 says to ethnic #2, 'Maybe we'd do better if we threw the dog up higher.'" Another twist is letting people of that same target group enjoy a monopoly on telling jokes about themselves. Many ethnic jokes appear in several cultures with nothing changed except the group being disparaged. For example, many American jokes about Canadian, Canadian jokes about Newfoundlanders, British jokes about the Irish, Australian jokes about the British and New Zealanders, Brazilian jokes about the Portuguese, Portuguese jokes about both the Brazilian and African people, especially Mozambican and Angolan people, Indian jokes about Sikhs are identical except for the ethnic group which is the subject of the joke. A traditional British form of ethnic joke starts "An Englishman, an Irishman, and a Scotsmanw/." and may go on to make fun of any of the three by comparison with the other two. A very special case is Jewish jokes. The humour of them is very specific. Also the form is very unusual in many languages using slang words from the Jewish community. The purpose of these jokes is not discration of Jews. Jewish jokes are favourite even among Jews. A quote from Martin Grotjahn sums up Jewish humor neatly: "One can almost see how a witty Jewish man carefully and cautiously takes a sharp dagger out of his enemy's hands, sharpens it until it can split a hair in midair, polishes it until it shines, stabs himself with it, and hands it back to his enemy with the silent reproach: Now see whether you can do it half as well." Similar to ethnic jokes are "higher education" jokes such as the so-called "Aggie jokes" popular in Texas that poke fun at students at Texas A&M University stereotyping them as of low intelligence. Sometimes University of Texas students are included in these jokes where they are called "T-sippers", implying that they consider themselves to be superior to those from other schools. Examples
See alsoSexist jokesA sexist joke is one that expresses the sexist belief that one gender or sex is somehow superior to the other. These are usually told nowadays in conjunction with the Sick Joke category, meaning that they are not intended to be funny because the speaker holds that opinion, but that they are funny for the shock value. Examples
Helen Keller jokesA Helen Keller joke is an offensive joke about Helen Keller, usually making fun of her handicaps. (Deaf, Blind, and Mute) Examples
Less offensive versionsSometimes, jokes that may be considered offensive (such as racist and sexist jokes) can be adapted in such a way as to remove the offensive content. This is especially true when the specific race or sex is portrayed as incredibly stupid. In these cases, they may be told involving a blonde or a generic "stupid person" instead of the race or sex in question. When a trait besides intellect is the topic of the joke, a less offensive adaptation may still be possible. Take, for example, this joke:
In this form, the joke is reliant on either the stereotype of man having large noses, or the stereotype of man having small penises. However, if the man is replaced with Cyrano de Bergerac (or Severus Snape), the humor remains intact without the use of racial stereotypes. Blonde jokes and Essex girl jokesMain article: Blonde jokes. Blonde jokes are a class of jokes which make light of the stereotype of the blonde woman (or, more rarely, blond man) as unintelligent, sexually promiscuous, or both. Like all humor based on stereotypes, blonde jokes are found offensive by some people. However, they tend not to be as controversial as racial humor or other forms of dark comedy. Many are, in fact, variations on racist jokes that have been adapted specifically to make them less offensive. A British variant of the blonde joke is the Essex girl joke, which became popular in the late 1980s, and satirizes working-class girls from the county of Essex. Jokes about animalsJokes about animals have signs of fable. The animals, which live in the forest, behave like humans. They are depicted with human properties. A fox is usually clever, a bear strong, and a hare astute and cheeky. Example
Shaggy dog storiesA shaggy dog story is an extremely long and involved joke with a weak or completely nonexistent punchline. The humor lies in building up the audience's anticipation and then letting them down completely. Shaggy jokes appear to date from the 1930s, although there are several competing variants for the "original" shaggy dog story. According to one, an advertisement is placed in a newspaper, searching for the shaggiest dog in the world. The teller of the joke then relates the story of the search for the shaggiest dog in extreme and exaggerated detail (flying around the world, climbing mountains, fending off sabre-toothed tigers, etc); a good teller will be able to stretch the story out to over half an hour. When the winning dog is finally presented, the advertiser takes a look at the dog and states: "I don't think he's so shaggy". You have two cowsA large number of jokes, beginning "You have two cowsw/.", describe what would be done with the cows under a certain political or economic system. The jokes satirize many countries, television shows, religions, and systems, especially bureaucracy, communism, and capitalism. Examples
Religion in jokesThere are many categories of jokes on religious subjects.
The magazine The Door describes itself as "The World's Pretty Much Only Religious Satire Magazine." Readers of Ship of Fools realise this is a bit of a joke. Other classes of jokes
See alsoWhat does Joke mean ? Search with Google !Article on Joke, category, different spelling or sense |
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