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Was it you who died, or your brother?

  • Hannah Baldwin

    Hannah Baldwin is a doctoral student at Royal Holloway, University of London. She studies literary humour in ancient Greece and Rome and is particularly interested in the application of contemporary humour theory to Classical texts.

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Published/Copyright: February 22, 2019

Abstract

This paper seeks to apply Christie Davies’ target theory to the classical jokebook Philogelos and more specifically, its most common protagonist, the scholastikos, whose central flaw is stupidity caused by his inability to interact with material reality, similar to modern “dotty professor” jokes. This paper seeks to build a model of how scholastikos jokes work, how the stereotype is constructed and perpetuated, how this differs from other “stupid” stereotypes used elsewhere in the Philogelos (largely ethnic-based stereotypes), and possible social and cultural anxieties bound up in the character of the scholastikos. It will explore the relationship between ancient and modern targets in light of Christie Davies’ target theory and extend this model of how humour functions to transhistorical case studies.

About the author

Hannah Baldwin

Hannah Baldwin is a doctoral student at Royal Holloway, University of London. She studies literary humour in ancient Greece and Rome and is particularly interested in the application of contemporary humour theory to Classical texts.

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Published Online: 2019-02-22
Published in Print: 2019-05-27

© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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