Jokes


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Albeit knock-knock jokes that kids love saying, corny dad jokes or dirty jokes etc people have been making people smile and laugh for thousands of years.

Here you can find jokes that will make you smile, chuckle or groan via blog posts.

A joke is a display of humour in which words are used within a specific and well-defined narrative structure to make people laugh and is usually not meant to be taken seriously.   It takes the form of a story, usually with dialogue, and ends in a punch line.   It is in the punch line that the audience becomes aware that the story contains a second, conflicting meaning.   This can be done using a pun or other wordplay such as irony or sarcasm, a logical incompatibility, nonsense, or other means.  Linguist Robert Hetzron offers the definition:

“A joke is a short humorous piece of oral literature in which the funniness culminates in the final sentence, called the punchline…  In fact, the main condition is that the tension should reach its highest level at the very end.  No continuation relieving the tension should be added.  As for its being “oral,” it is true that jokes may appear printed, but when further transferred, there is no obligation to reproduce the text verbatim, as in the case of poetry.

Read more about Jokes here.

The History Of Jokes In Print

Any joke documented from the past has been saved through happenstance rather than design. Jokes do not belong to a refined culture, but rather to the entertainment and leisure of all classes.  As such, any printed versions were considered ephemera, i.e., temporary documents created for a specific purpose and intended to be thrown away.  Many of these early jokes deal with scatological and sexual topics, entertaining to all social classes but not to be valued and saved.

Various kinds of jokes have been identified in ancient pre-classical texts.  The oldest identified joke is an ancient Sumerian proverb from 1900 BC containing toilet humour: “Something which has never occurred since time immemorial; a young woman did not fart in her husband’s lap.”  Its records were dated to the Old Babylonian period and the joke may go as far back as 2300 BC.  The second oldest joke found, discovered on the Westcar Papyrus and believed to be about Sneferu, was from Ancient Egypt circa 1600 BC: “How do you entertain a bored pharaoh? You sail a boatload of young women dressed only in fishing nets down the Nile and urge the pharaoh to go catch a fish.”  The tale of the three ox drivers from Adab completes the three known oldest jokes in the world. This is a comic triple dating back to 1200 BC Adab.  It concerns three men seeking justice from a king on the matter of ownership over a newborn calf, for whose birth they all consider themselves to be partially responsible.  The king seeks advice from a priestess on how to rule the case, and she suggests a series of events involving the men’s households and wives.  Unfortunately, the final portion of the story (which included the punch line), has not survived intact, though legible fragments suggest it was bawdy in nature.

The earliest extant joke book is the Philogelos (Greek for The Laughter-Lover), a collection of 265 jokes written in crude ancient Greek dating to the fourth or fifth century AD.  The author of the collection is obscure and a number of different authors are attributed to it, including “Hierokles and Philagros the grammatikos”, just “Hierokles”, or, in the Suda, “Philistion”.  British classicist Mary Beard states that the Philogelos may have been intended as a jokester’s handbook of quips to say on the fly, rather than a book meant to be read straight through.  Many of the jokes in this collection are surprisingly familiar, even though the typical protagonists are less recognisable to contemporary readers: the absent-minded professor, the eunuch, and people with hernias or bad breath.   The Philogelos even contains a joke similar to Monty Python’s “Dead Parrot Sketch”.

Read more about The History Of Jokes In Print here.

 

Telling Jokes

Telling a joke is a cooperative effort; it requires that the teller and the audience mutually agree in one form or another to understand the narrative which follows as a joke.  In a study of conversation analysis, the sociologist Harvey Sacks describes in detail the sequential organisation in telling a single joke.  “This telling is composed, as for stories, of three serially ordered and adjacently placed types of sequences… the preface [framing], the telling, and the response sequences.”  Folklorists expand this to include the context of the joking.  Who is telling what jokes to whom? And why is he telling them when? The context of the joke-telling in turn leads into a study of joking relationships, a term coined by anthropologists to refer to social groups within a culture who engage in institutionalised banter and joking.

The Framing Of Jokes

Framing is done with a (frequently formulaic) expression that keys the audience in to expect a joke. “Have you heard the one…”, “Reminds me of a joke I heard…”, “So, a lawyer and a doctor…”; these conversational markers are just a few examples of linguistic frames used to start a joke.  Regardless of the frame used, it creates a social space and clear boundaries around the narrative which follows.  The audience response to this initial frame can be acknowledgement and anticipation of the joke to follow.  It can also be a dismissal, as in “this is no joking matter” or “this is no time for jokes”.

The performance frame serves to label joke-telling as a culturally marked form of communication.  Both the performer and audience understand it to be set apart from the “real” world.  “An elephant walks into a bar…”; a person sufficiently familiar with both the English language and the way jokes are told automatically understands that such a compressed and formulaic story, being told with no substantiating details, and placing an unlikely combination of characters into an unlikely setting and involving them in an unrealistic plot, is the start of a joke, and the story that follows is not meant to be taken at face value (i.e. it is non-bona-fide communication).  The framing itself invokes a play mode; if the audience is unable or unwilling to move into play, then nothing will seem funny.

Read more About Jokes here.

The above articles were taken from Wikipedia and are subject to change.

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