T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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128.2 | sex-specific | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed May 16 1990 12:54 | 9 |
| In a pre-marriage class we took, the only thing that split on
gender lines was that the women all complained about the men's
joking style. Each of the women complained that her fiance would
make jokes that made her uncomfortable or that insulted her. None
of the men complained about his fiance's jokes, though some
thought their fiance was overly sensitive. None of the other
conflicts we talked about split along gender lines.
--David
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128.3 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Wed May 16 1990 13:04 | 7 |
| re .2 Maybe we males have thicker skins around our sense of humor?
The term 'ball-busting' as a form of humor is very male, almost
exclusively so. How many guys would tolerate friendly BB from
a woman? Yet we do it *to* them easily enough. Is there a
double standard for humor ?
|
128.4 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | My life is in transition | Wed May 16 1990 14:37 | 14 |
| I would love some massive insight into the male/female humor split.
Justine's note reminded me of last night's WITCH lecture. Eileen Kennedy showed
wood cuts and more recent pictures of witches and women. She showed several
progressions that indicated how women were desensitized to images of other
women being brutally murdered (burned, hung, drowned), or to images of women
and nature as twisted, harmful, and evil, or to images of _old_ women as
objects to be reviled and feared. Accompanying text often indicated how the
viewer was supposed to perceive the picture (not "three women being hanged on
the accusations of their neighbors" but "witches rightfully disposed of" type
stuff).
But of course it wasn't meant to be humor.
Mez
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128.5 | discharging shame | ICS::WALKER | BIENVENU CHEZ MOI | Wed May 16 1990 16:01 | 23 |
| I've been away from Co-Counseling for 5 years now, but I often found
that Co-Counselors thought about things better and differently than
other people, and from this perspective:
1. Humor in general would be seen as an attempt to discharge [or rid
ourselves] of the feelings around memories that are causing us pain, and
the more outrageous the humor, the greater would be the pain on the part
of the joker. Racist and sexist comments are seen the same way. The
theory is that when prejudice is first taken in, it is taken in with
pain, and when you remember that prejudice is first taken in at very
young ages when it is difficult for us to control or explain away the
pain we feel, it is easy to understand how deeply hidden the prejudice
and pain are. In Co-Counseling, prejudice is "discharged" by
remembering and by crying.
2. In the case of really gross jokes, I would guess that in addition
to pain and hurt, the person is feeling shame and embarrassment, which
can be discharged through laughter. I don't really mean to suggest
here that the comic referred to is successfully discharging his pain
and shame--if he were successful, where would his occupation go? But I
think he/they are tapping and using these feelings.
Briana
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128.6 | I'd be a basket case with out humor! | ULTRA::DONAHUE | | Wed May 16 1990 16:16 | 15 |
| I feel that humor is definitely on my list of things I couldn't live
without. Growing up as an obese kid who wore glasses, I found out at a
young age how to use my sense of humor to my advantage. Kids _can_ be
cruel! If I didn't joke back, I would have cried and gave them more
reason to tease! I'm a better person for it today!
As for male vs female type of humor... It depends on the situation.
Majority of my family joke around alot. If the joke is aimed at one
person or the other, does not depend on whether that person is male or
female. We kid everyone equally! So be careful if you ever walk into
one of my family reunions! You really have to be able to dish it out as
well as take it around my family!
Norma
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128.7 | ...all the people at this party... | CSC32::M_LEWIS | | Wed May 16 1990 20:07 | 9 |
|
"...laughing and crying's the same release..."
-Joni Mitchell
M...
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128.8 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Secretary of the Stratosphere | Thu May 17 1990 05:30 | 6 |
| There is a quote: "I laugh so that I do not cry."
For many people, making light of misfortune is a way to keep that
misfortune from overwhelming them. Humor is a release valve.
--- jerry
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128.9 | hatred and violence are not funny | SCIVAX::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu May 17 1990 10:18 | 7 |
|
I agree that humor helps us deal with pain. But I'm suggesting that
for much the same reason that humor helps us deal with pain it also
dilutes the painfulness of racial and ethnic hatred and misogyny.
For that reason, I don't think that everything that's funny is safe.
Justine
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