ABSTRACT

Laughter and Liberation is based on the idea that humor is an agent of psychological liberation. Since we are able to include every kind of wit and humor under the umbrella of this thesis, it amounts to an informal, comprehensive theory of the ludicrous. Briefly put, the theory proposes that the most fundamental function of humor is its power to release us from the inhibitions and restrictions under which we live our daily lives.The quest for laughter is as old as man himself Egyptian pharaohs and Roman emperors went to great lengths to amuse themselves, as did the monarchs of medieval Europe with court jesters. Our speech and literature abound with references to humor such as: "Laugh and the world laughs with you, cry and you cry alone," "He who laughs last laughs best," "All the world loves a clown," "Laugh if you are wise," and "A good laugh is sunshine in the house."In Laughter and Liberation, Harvey Mindess tells us how laughter and our sense of humor work. He gives us the background of several well-known humorists Steve Allen, Richard Armour, Sholom Aleichem and explains his theory of how and why they have become expert in making others laugh.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

section |2 pages

Section One

chapter |16 pages

From Laughter to Humor

chapter |8 pages

Freedom from Conformity

chapter |16 pages

Freedom from Inferiority

chapter |16 pages

Freedom from Morality

chapter |10 pages

Freedom from Reason

chapter |6 pages

Freedom from Language

chapter |16 pages

Freedom from Naivete

chapter |10 pages

Freedom from Redundancy

chapter |10 pages

Freedom from Seriousness

chapter |10 pages

Freedom from Egotism

chapter |10 pages

Developing a Sense of Humor

section |2 pages

Section Two

chapter |12 pages

The Creative Element

chapter |12 pages

Telling Jokes

chapter |8 pages

Humor and Fanaticism

chapter |12 pages

Laughter and Women’s Lib

chapter |10 pages

Humor Therapy

section |2 pages

Section Three

chapter |10 pages

Appendix

chapter |1 pages

Tonsils