Monday, March 7, 2011

This Slate article proves why I must have Jewish blood and how it is fighting for supremacy

Berkeley Prof Pinpoints Exact Birthdate of Jewish Humor


Where does Jewish humor come from? Is it geneticor some kind of cultural adaptation to thousands of years of suffering?

Actually, it comes from Vilna, circa 1661.

According to UC Berkeley professor Mel Gordon, Jewish humor's distinctive blend of wisecracking and self-deprecation has a very specific, very unfunny source: The Chmielnicki massacres of the 17th century, in which nearly 100,000 Jews were massacred across Ukraine within three years.

In today's Jerusalem Post, Gordon describes to Sue Fishkoff how, in the wake of that carnage and its resulting famines, a council of leading rabbis from Poland and Ukraine concluded that God must be punishing the Jews. To get themselves on the right side of the Lord, they decided to outlaw all things funny and indulgent. Before that period, there were "at least 10 different stock comic types in shtetl life," Fishkoff notes. Some were jugglers, some were singers. These performers were all bannedbut one, the badkhn, was allowed to keep practicing. A kind of "cruel court jester," the badkhn was a "staple in East European Jewish life for three centuries":
His humor was biting, even vicious. He would tell a bride she was ugly, make jokes about the groom's dead mother and round things off by belittling the guests for giving such worthless gifts. Much of the badkhn's humor was grotesque, even scatological.
The elders decided that the badkhn didn't exactly encourage merrymaking, so he alone survived the prohibitionensuring that Jewish humor would forever be stamped with his characteristically dark sarcasm.
Contemporary comedians like Sarah Silverman owe a lot to the centuries-old badkhn sensibility, Gordon argues.
"They would talk about drooping breasts, big butts, small penises," Gordon said. "We know a lot about them because they were always suing each other about who could tell which fart joke on which side of Grodno."

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