Laughter in Ancient Rome (87 page)

BOOK: Laughter in Ancient Rome
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Rabbie, Edwin,
110
,
228n48
Rabelais, Francois:
Gargantua and Pantagruel,
60
,
61
Ramsay, Sir William,
26
Rapp, A.,
270n18
Raskin, Victor,
38
,
222n41
rats, laughter of,
47
religious images, competing modes of,
175
Rembrandt, self-portrait as Zeuxis,
173
renidere
(to shine out),
72
,
73
,
74
,
240n20
rex facetus,
medieval,
130
Rhadamanthys, as inventor of the joke,
208–9
,
275n87
; as judge in underworld,
161
rhetoric: effect on jokes,
208
; Hellenistic handbooks on,
225n23
; of invective,
247n26
; morality of,
108
,
109
; truth of,
126
Richlin, Amy,
259n3
; on Freudian laughter,
229n64
;
The Garden of Priapus,
105–6
rictus
(laughter),
72
; of animals,
159
; of dogs,
260n16
; Ovid’s use of,
260n14
ridere
(to laugh),
71
,
72
,
75
; etymology of,
231n81
,
238n1
; favorable senses of,
83
; and
meidian,
253n25
; Virgil’s use of,
73
ridicule: Aristotelian tradition on,
121
; Cicero’s use of,
106
; enforcement of norms through,
106
; in Roman culture,
232n6
; Spartan use of,
93
; use in persuasion,
106
ridiculus
(laugh-able): Cicero as,
102–3
; parasites as,
150
,
257n86
; Quintilian on,
125
; two senses of,
108
,
125
.
See also
the laughable
Risus
(god of Laughter), in
The Golden Ass,
160
,
178
,
181–83
risus
(laughter),
11
,
71
; and
gelōs,
48
; rules governing,
83
; in Virgil’s fourth
Eclogue,
81–85
.
See also
laughter, Roman
rituals: inversionary,
63
,
65
,
235n47
; of misrule,
60
; scapegoat,
182
,
267n124
Robert, L.,
270n18
Roberts, M.,
259n103
Robertson, D. S.,
267n124
Rochefort, G.,
269n7
Roller, M. B.,
256n77
,
258n88
Roman Empire: bilingual literary culture of,
85–95
,
243n68
; construction of identity in,
243n65
; cultural change in,
87
; diversity of inhabitants,
86–87
; Greek culture of,
88
,
90
; Greek literature of,
85–95
,
243n70
; power structures of,
88
rulers, benevolent jokes of,
130
.
See also
emperors, Roman
Saint-Denis, E. de,
231n3
,
238n64
sales
(witticisms), Cicero on,
114
,
115
.
See also
wit
sanniones,
262n52
; Cicero on,
168
Sarmentus (
scurra
),
68
,
143
,
255n48
; meddlesomeness of,
153
Satellius Quadratus,
151
,
257n88
Sather Lectures,
ix
,
211
satire, Roman,
68
; psycho-social dynamics of,
41
Saturnalia (festival),
62–65
,
235n41
; Aulus Gellius on,
236n49
; Bakhtin on,
62–63
,
65
,
235n43
; the carnivalesque in,
235n47
; and Christmas,
63
; costume of,
63
,
65
; elites’ participation in,
236n49
; feasting in,
64
,
236nn49
,
55
; free speech in,
64
,
235n46
,
237n56
; as inversionary ritual,
63
,
65
,
235n47
; king of,
64
,
235n42
,
236n54
; paternalism in,
65
; Pliny the Elder on,
237n56
; role reversal in,
63
,
64
,
235n44
; social equality in,
65
.
See also
Macrobius,
Saturnalia
satyrs, rictus of,
57
Scaliger, on Virgil’s fourth Eclogue,
241n54
Schlam, C. C.,
268n130
Schofield, Malcolm,
227n40
scholastikos:
Cicero as,
190
; laughable qualities of,
190–91
scholastikos
jokes,
185–86
,
190–91
,
268n4
,
270nn24
,
25
; about dreams,
197
; about teachers,
192
; datable,
189
; family life in,
198
; identity in,
200
; lost point of,
272n45
; mimic themes of,
271n40
; numbers in,
199
,
269n7
; Sidon in,
271n34
; standard lines in,
271n38
; told on themselves,
194
; visual images in,
194

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