Humour in the beginning: religion, humour and laughter in formative stages of Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Judaism

Humour in the Beginning presents a multidisciplinary collection of fourteen in-depth case-studies on the role of humour - both benign and blasphemous, elitist and ordinary, orthodox and heterodox - in early, formative stages of Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and (late-antique) Judaism.

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Dijkstra, Roald (Editor) ; van der Velde, Paul (Editor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
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Published: Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing Company [2022]
In: Topics in humor research (volume 10)
Year: 2022
Series/Journal:Topics in humor research volume 10
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Religion / Humor
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
B Electronic books
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Erscheint auch als: 9789027211538
Description
Summary:Humour in the Beginning presents a multidisciplinary collection of fourteen in-depth case-studies on the role of humour - both benign and blasphemous, elitist and ordinary, orthodox and heterodox - in early, formative stages of Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and (late-antique) Judaism.
Intro -- Humour in the Beginning -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Preface -- About the contributors -- Part I. Humour as tool and topic (essays) -- Humour, risk and religion -- Introduction: A risky form of communication -- Humour and religion -- Bibliography -- Religion and humour: The big picture -- Bibliography -- Is the application of modern humour theories on historical cases a joke? -- The many theories of humour -- The problem of the Western-centeredness of humour theories -- Bibliography -- Part II. Christianity and Judaism in Late Antiquity -- Derisive laughter and religious identity in ancient Christianity -- Nag Hammadi texts and Christian identity -- Codex II and Codex VII -- The laughter of Eve -- The laughter of the Saviour -- Laughing at the world-creator and his prophets -- Jesus smiles to/at the disciples -- Origin, function and meaning of the laughter motif -- The contribution of the laughter motif to the religious project of ascetics and monastics -- Bibliography -- Opponent or advocate?: Exploring Clement of Alexandria's attitude(s) towards laughter -- Influences -- Causing laughter -- Laughing animals -- Intoxication, lust, and laughter -- Pedagogical laughter -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- "This joke has gone on for long enough": Humour, derision, and allusion in the letters of Gregory of Nazianzus -- Attitudes towards gracefulness and play -- Confirming a friendship: Basil and the pontic pontikia -- An invitation to smile: Humour explicitly announced -- How to poke fun at your friends -- Vegetables and interpretive problems -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- The smile of the martyr -- Martyrdom as religious body practice -- The smiling martyr -- Stoic smile and eschatological smile -- Smile versus laughter -- Martyr's jokes -- Bibliography -- Divine mockery and laughing Rabbis.
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ISBN:9027257469