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Laughing Matters

Comic Tradition in India

"How can anyone laugh who knows of old age, disease, and death?"—Buddhacarita

This question, so solemnly posed by the young Buddha, first led Lee Siegel to examine the hitherto unexplored realm of Indian comedy. Laughing Matters is Siegel’s account of two intersecting journeys: a search for comic traditions created and preserved in Sanskrit literature and a journey through modern India in quest of a laughter that persists across time and culture.

Hearing a boisterous and bawdy voice from India’s past, Siegel has provided original and highly entertaining translations of Sanskrit literature that reveal a sparkling sensibility embedded in the texts. These translations are integrated with a detailed analysis of the types and structures of India’s mirth. Siegel develops an original theory of comedy and laughter, applying it to reveal the humor in the ancient works. Defining sacred and profane comedy and the "taste" and "erotics" of laughter, he delineates two main Indian categories of comedy—laughter at others and laughter at oneself—which are roughly parallel to the Western traditions of satire and humor. He examines these categories in all of their forms and functions: satires of manners, social satire, and religious satire; and human and divine comedy. Siegel concludes by presenting his perceptions of humor in modern India as seen through cartoons, movies, books, and social gatherings.

Laughing Matters is both a serious and a hilarious study of the Indian comic sense of life—a vision formed in the convergence of the bitter insight of satire and the sweet outlook of humor. Past and present, the contextual and the universal, scholarship and the picaresque, are all interwoven in this original treatise on the aesthetics of comedy and the psychology of laughter.

516 pages | 6.00 x 9.00 | © 1987

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

Asian Studies: South Asia

Religion: South and East Asian Religions

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
Prologue
1. The Laughter of Ganesa
Act One: Satire
2. The Laughter of the Sons of Bharata
3. The Laughter of Kali
4. The Laughter of the Child
5. The Laughter of Kama
Act Two: Humor
Scene One: The Human Comedy
6. The Laughter of the Weaver
7. The Laughter of the Jackal
Scene Two: The Divine Comedy
8. The Laughter of Krsna
9. The Laughter of Siva
Epilogue
10. The Laughter of Kumara
Bibliographic Essay
Bibliography of Indian Texts Cited
Illustration Citations
Index of Indian Texts and Authors Cited
Subject Index

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