The Scotsman

Comforting to know that comedians still take on the tough job of tackling taboos

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Humour has always provided a vehicle for performers – and the rest of us – to explore difficult

topics, says James Robson

As a scholar of humour, and a huge fan of standup, I always get a flutter of excitement when the Edinburgh Festival Fringe is in full flow. Gathered in Edinburgh this year are some of my must-see favourites such as Henning Wehn (‘The German comedy ambassador’) and Graham Fellows (aka John Shuttlewor­th). But the Fringe’s tagline ‘Into the Unknown’ provides a useful reminder for me to seek out fresh talent at the Festival in an effort to discover new comic perspectiv­es on the world and novel ways of raising a laugh.

In a year where gender politics, sexual behaviour and sexism have been such live issues, what particular­ly interests me is the way that comedians are now discussing, having fun with,orsimplyav­oidingthes­econtrover­sial subjects. Humour has always provided a vehicle for performers – and, indeed, all of us – to explore topics that might otherwise be difficult to broach, but how is this playing out now in the summer of 2018?

At this point I need to confess that I am a scholar of the ancient rather than the modern world. My own research focuses on comedy in Classical Athens in the late fifth century BC, but for me comparing and contrastin­g ancient and modern perspectiv­es can provide exciting new ways to view both cultures.

OK, so these comparison­s need to be handled carefully. Gender roles in classical Athens were far more prescribed than those of today and in this deeply patriarcha­l society there was certainly no equivalent of the #metoo movement (or #kaiego, as an ancient Greek might say). But with Athens suffering substantia­l losses of menfolk in its prolonged war against Sparta and with gender demographi­cs in the city consequent­ly skewed, the late fifth century was a period when the role of women became an increasing­ly hot topic amongst Athens’ chattering classes.

What is fascinatin­g for me is the way that ancient comic writers – all of whom were men – seized on male concerns about women’s increasing visibility and importance in the city, using the ability of comedy to present mischievou­s and fantastica­l ideas to its audiences, while simultaneo­usly exposing and playing on social anxieties.

The main way athenians consumed their comedy was in the theatre in the form of comic plays, staged as part of a civic festival. And in 411 BC, Aristophan­es, Athens’ most celebrated comic playwright, served up the play Lysistrata, where women seize control of Athens, stage a sex strike and subjugate its men in an effort to put a stop to the war.

that ordinary women featured as the main characters in a comedy, this was a devastatin­g theatrical coup. But interestin­gly, too, in the play Athens’ women are largely characteri­sed as wine-loving, deceitful, aggressive and sex-mad. This is a misogynist stereotype, to be sure, but from the comic playwright’s perspectiv­e it is also provided a highly effective way of amusing, teasing and unsettling his predominan­tly male audience.

The potential that comedy presents for exploring difficult issues is worth considerin­g further. One important quality that humour offers to all of us, comedians included, is that we can always claim that the primary purpose of our jokes is to make someone laugh – and not, say, to convey our personal opinions and prejudices. This allows joke-tellers to sail much closer to the wind than they might otherwise, though not necessaril­y in an unproblema­tic way. Whatever joke-tellers might claim, others may still view their humour as sexist, racist, or homophobic, for example.

This use of humour to broach thorny issues is put to use in everyday life, too. Modern studies have

exposed the ways in which jokes are used by terminally ill patients to talk to their carers about the taboo topic of death or how humour is used in flirtatiou­s conversati­ons.

So, I’m heading off for my comedy fix at the Fringe full of anticipati­on this year. I am hoping and not expect-

ing to encounter the dangling, leather phalluses and sexploitat­ive portrayal of women that an ancient Athenian theatre-goer might have witnessed 2,500 years ago.

But I am looking forward to discoverin­g how this modern crop of comedians deals with society’ s currents en sincethis was probably the first time

sitivities and talking points. What issues will they be prepared to tackle head on? Where will their flights of comic fantasy take us and where will the boundaries be drawn? My own research on ancient comedy looks at these issues the ancient Greek world, but these questions are all the more pressing when we are watching comedy today.

James Robson is Professor of Classical Studies and Head of the School of Arts & Cultures at the Open University. He is author of Aristophan­es: An Introducti­on and Sex and Sexuality in Classical Athens

 ??  ?? 0 Comedy and tragedy have always been closely entwined; the stand-up comedians at the Fringe will confirm that, but they do us a service by going where everyone else is too uncomforta­ble
0 Comedy and tragedy have always been closely entwined; the stand-up comedians at the Fringe will confirm that, but they do us a service by going where everyone else is too uncomforta­ble
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