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I think Americans just don't value buffoonery anymore so they don't get how funny it is for a dog to have a big head. Hahahaha
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 18:27 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:58 |
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Crab Dad posted:Yeah but there’s no way that a little dog loving a big dog would ever not be funny. Less transgressive in a world where there are a lot more untended animals out in the streets.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:01 |
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I like how often dogs play into ancient humor Also farts
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:03 |
Slim Jim Pickens posted:I think Americans just don't value buffoonery anymore so they don't get how funny it is for a dog to have a big head. Hahahaha
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:05 |
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Imagine a young woman farting in her husband’s lap, 4000 years ago on the banks of the river Euphrates I made that one up, completely original
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:16 |
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I visited the Getty Villa in Los Angeles a little while back and was struck by one display of ancient Greek drinking vessels - most of which were decorated with satyrs and nymphs and boners and naked ladies and loving. A typical example: https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/object/103TSHquote:Attic Red-Figure Kylix
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:23 |
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I disagree that humor would be that much different. Funny is still funny. We’re still the same animals we were. Marines draw dicks on everything in 2023 much like Roman soldiers and those who came before them. I think pieces like that and animal graves etc. do a great deal to demonstrate we’re not really different creatures than we were before. Yes, we have millennia of technological advances based up the collective knowledge of the past. We’re still just people.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:52 |
different kinds of humor age differently. the ancient equivalent of "how about that airline food?" or monica lewinsky jokes or whatever will always come across imperfectly. hell, the examples i picked are extremely 90s and don't have the same vibe now that they did 25 years ago. blowjob party cups and funny-looking dogs are the kinds of thing that transcend time and place
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 19:57 |
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Do we get many nutshots from ancient greece?
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 20:03 |
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Achilles, crumpled in agony: I told you fuckers, that's not the spot!
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 20:14 |
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Jazerus posted:different kinds of humor age differently. the ancient equivalent of "how about that airline food?" or monica lewinsky jokes or whatever will always come across imperfectly. hell, the examples i picked are extremely 90s and don't have the same vibe now that they did 25 years ago. Yeah, some things come across really well, but we have examples of ancient jokes we don't understand. Some of Aristophenes's jokes are a total mystery to us, since we are lacking their context. Going even further back, there are Sumerian proverbs that probably were intended to be funny, but they can be very hard to understand. The tricky part about Sumerian proverbs and humor is that some of them are clearly intended to be humorous, but not all of them were, and we don't really know how to tell them apart. Or if the Sumerians would have made that distinction in the same way we do. There's one that makes the rounds on the internet periodically that seems to be a joke, that says "A dog walked into a tavern and said, "I can't see a thing. I'll open this one." This might be talking about prostitution, since taverns were often also brothels, but we don't really know. There are some other mysterious dog-related jokes. "The dog wags his tongue at a millstone, and says to his companion: "Let me clothe you in the lid of a measuring bowl!"" "A dog climbed up onto the roof." There are also Sumerian fart jokes, like "Something which has never occurred since time immemorial: a young woman did not fart in her husband's embrace." They also liked penis/urine jokes, but these can also be obscure, like "The fox, having urinated into the sea, said: "The depths of the sea are my urine!"" Another one says "A donkey beating its penis against its belly" and nothing else. There are also some Sumerian proverbs that you could post on boomer facebook without a problem: "For his pleasure he got married. On his thinking it over he got divorced."
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:04 |
I can understand the fox and the donkey one but they're not funny. I may just be inured to the prospect of animals beating off due to reading (insert your least favorite social media site here) though.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:21 |
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Mr. Nice! posted:I disagree that humor would be that much different. Funny is still funny. We’re still the same animals we were. Marines draw dicks on everything in 2023 much like Roman soldiers and those who came before them. Marines don't generally believe that the drawing of dicks provides a genuine magical effect. People in the past were people, yes, but they were very foreign people.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:23 |
mossyfisk posted:Marines don't generally believe that the drawing of dicks provides a genuine magical effect. People in the past were people, yes, but they were very foreign people.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:32 |
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I want to know where you picked up the idea that the Romans thought drawing dicks had a magic effect.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:34 |
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CrypticFox posted:Another one says "A donkey beating its penis against its belly" and nothing else. To work on something to no benefit like a male donkey restricted by a fence from his Jenny. Nanni has been trying to recover his money from Ea-Nasir like a Donkey beating his penis on his belly.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:42 |
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Scarodactyl posted:Do we get many nutshots from ancient greece? Archaeologists have found sling bullets inscribed with "I hope this hits you in the dick"
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:48 |
Jamwad Hilder posted:I want to know where you picked up the idea that the Romans thought drawing dicks had a magic effect.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 21:49 |
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Nessus posted:I think there were those priapus statues which were probably good luck charms, but I assume this stuff was analogous to the Japanese omamoris you can buy at ten billion little shrines and temples for about 1000 yen. They were just made of pottery or stoneware so a number of them survived. Ya I mean that's sort of what I'm getting at. There are plenty of symbols where we know they thought "this symbol is good luck" but they didn't necessarily believe "this is literally magic"
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 22:06 |
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CrypticFox posted:"The fox, having urinated into the sea, said: "The depths of the sea are my urine!" Born on third and thinks he hit a triple.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 22:40 |
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You have to be careful not to over-sell that commonality. An expression I picked up in grad school puts it well: the past is a foreign land. Context matters a lot for understanding meaning. There are aspects of humor between cultures in the world today that don’t translate well. Now imagine it with the distance of centuries and key bits of cultural context that have been lost. Some things have context that we get because we share the same bodies. Farting, loving, etc. But it’s hard to say what the cultural weights put on them is. Imagine trying to explain an edgy 90s schoolyard gay joke to an ancient Persian, for example. He’s going to understand that two men can gently caress but isn’t going to have the cultural context to understand why a bunch of Americans in 1993 find it simultaneously hilarious, provocative, and insulting of levied against someone else. Or how about this one: imagine explaining rickrolling to put hypothetical ancient Persian visitor. Or surrealist comedy. Or the bits of Larry the Cable Guy that require you having a grasp of early 21st century American class and regional dynamics. People in the past aren’t weird space aliens but you also have to be careful not to go too far with “they were just like us.”
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 23:27 |
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There's a lot of this that I think will not ever be truly known. We're asking ourselves "how literally different was their belief about magic/luck/symbols than ours" and its the sort of thing that 1) not even everyone alive today has the same beliefs and 2) we'd only be able to figure it out by having a long sit down conversation with somebody. Who in this case has been dead for centuries. I have coworkers who are very sincere in their belief in stuff like astrology, and I have coworkers who think its just silly fun, and I have others who think its absolute nonsense. I know people who have an ironic, humorous engagement with astrology that only becomes obvious from knowing them personally. So I think that in the case of "how literally did ancient romans think x good luck symbol actually made things better" we won't ever know, and its probable that there was a spread of people who thought very sincerely that these things were magical and people who thought it couldn't hurt and people who just rolled their eyes.
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# ? Apr 9, 2023 23:41 |
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Publius Claudius Pulcher didn't believe in magic and look what that got him. You really shouldn't gently caress around with sacred chicken.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 00:04 |
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Salish Wool Dog is definitely my favourite. A sheep dog in the sense of "kept like sheep for wool". It's a huge shame they're extinct.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 02:15 |
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Edgar Allen Ho posted:Imagine a young woman farting in her husband’s lap, 4000 years ago on the banks of the river Euphrates Also my favourite Sumerian proverb. IIRC the character for "fart" is the same as the one for "poop", and the whole "lap" thing is even more suggestive than it sounds in English.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 02:18 |
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Lead out in cuffs posted:Also my favourite Sumerian proverb. It's a sex joke. Farting during sex is funny, unless you're the one having sex.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 02:27 |
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Mr. Nice! posted:I disagree that humor would be that much different. Funny is still funny. We’re still the same animals we were. Marines draw dicks on everything in 2023 much like Roman soldiers and those who came before them. It really depends on the humor. There are some things that are universal, like farts. But a lot of humor is very cultural and doesn't translate well--even today, go watch a Japanese comedy show and it's mostly mystifying, not funny. We have preserved ancient jokes and some of them work, but a lot are just confusing. Jamwad Hilder posted:I want to know where you picked up the idea that the Romans thought drawing dicks had a magic effect. Because in some cases, they did. Dicks had the power to create life so could be a sort of magical ward, you often find them at intersections to protect people from the conflict of the two road spirits crossing. Dicks just scratched into a wall may have been this or may have been guys scratching a dick into a wall, it's hard to say.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 04:09 |
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Grand Fromage posted:go watch a Japanese comedy show and it's mostly mystifying, not funny. uh
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 04:48 |
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One of my strongest memories of my grandfather is him howling, tears down his face laughing, just completely losing it, over a Ziggy strip. I still have no idea how it was funny.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 04:54 |
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Tulip posted:One of my strongest memories of my grandfather is him howling, tears down his face laughing, just completely losing it, over a Ziggy strip. I still have no idea how it was funny. Iykyk
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 04:55 |
Grand Fromage posted:It really depends on the humor. There are some things that are universal, like farts. But a lot of humor is very cultural and doesn't translate well--even today, go watch a Japanese comedy show and it's mostly mystifying, not funny. We have preserved ancient jokes and some of them work, but a lot are just confusing.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 05:05 |
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Grand Fromage posted:It really depends on the humor. There are some things that are universal, like farts. But a lot of humor is very cultural and doesn't translate well--even today, go watch a Japanese comedy show and it's mostly mystifying, not funny. We have preserved ancient jokes and some of them work, but a lot are just confusing. See also: the death of the American comedy movie when international box office became alot more important
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 05:30 |
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Some of the Roman jokes translate a bit betterquote:Two idiots are going on a road trip. Partway through the journey, one of them starts feeling the call of nature, and steps off the road to relieve himself. Unfortunately, it took him longer than expected to finish his business, so by the time he gets back on the road, his friend is already way out of sight The joke here being 'ha ha, this is still ancient rome and we haven't invented texting'.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 07:20 |
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 07:48 |
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Rochallor posted:Born on third and thinks he hit a triple. There's other jokes about the fox suggesting he is a classic stock character, of a rather familiar archetype. I think earlier itt those proverbs were discussed.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 09:51 |
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Grand Fromage posted:go watch a Japanese comedy show and it's mostly mystifying i'd expect that it would be one hundred percent mystifying, seeing as i don't speak japanese
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 11:05 |
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Tulip posted:One of my strongest memories of my grandfather is him howling, tears down his face laughing, just completely losing it, over a Ziggy strip. I still have no idea how it was funny. Pobody's Nerfect
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 11:31 |
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Koramei posted:For a long time, yes. Even chariots were deep into the bronze age in most places. True cavalry shows up before stirrups but by no means immediately. Not disagreeing, but 'until the end of the bronze age' leaves a lot of centuries before the stirrup comes along.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 11:47 |
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Seriously. Set aside 17 hours for a variety show from Japan or Korea and see how many of the jokes land (I am presuming you are not Japanese or Korean here) and how much of it is just people laughing at stuff that makes zero sense to you. It's a good example of how culturally linked humor is. I tried watching them for language practice when living over there and it was my first real experience with the idea. And the stuff that does work is interesting, like slapstick.
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# ? Apr 10, 2023 12:51 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:58 |
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# ? Apr 11, 2023 04:10 |