massivearticlelist.com
  Site Home :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Article
Search:   
 
 

God's Breathed

The goal of this command is love, which comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere ... - Mellody Davis
 

Happy Easter; Iran is Making Nuclear Weapons!

So much for peace and good will towards men. So much for; Forgive them fore, They know not what they ... - Lance Winslow
 

A More Perfect Union

Growing up I was taught in history class that our country was a melting pot. People came to the Unit ... - Audrey Valeriani
 
 

Theosophy - Blavatsky and Gurus

The spin-doctors work is never done as long as people make money and gain power through religion. - Robert Baird
 

Religion Is Boring, God Is Fun!

Religion is boring! Yes, but God is not religious. God and religion have nothing in common. Religion ... - Paul Davis
 
 

Site Home –› News & Events –› Current Affairs
 

Is This Funny: Can We Develop Non-Violent Humour?

 

Author: Ivana Milojevi?

In its original historical meaning, a cartoon (from the Italian cartone, meaning "big paper") is a full-size drawing made on paper as a study for a further artwork, such as a painting or tapestry. In modern print media, a cartoon is an illustration, usually humorous in intent. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartoons

The current representation of conflict over the freedom to publish cartoons featuring the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) in western media as the conflict between freedom of speech and expression and Muslim sensitivities - obscures what is really going on at the deepest level of our collective global psyche.

I strongly believe that the publication of the infamous cartoons in Danish Jyllands-Posten was very little about the "ongoing debate on freedom of expression that we cherish so highly", as argued by the editors. While I think that freedom of expression, speech and press is one of the greatest human accomplishments, these freedoms should be protected where and when possible and sensible but not at all costs.

That higher principles take precedence over human life is one of the central tenants of society build on hierarchical and patriarchal values. The central tenant of a society build on values of centrality of human (and human - nature) relatedness is to take seriously concerns and interests of global human community, as well as the non-human community, future generations of people and other living beings.

What is considered funny is always premised on the underlying worldview. For example, for a racist joke to be seen as funny, racism has to be an underlying worldview, we have to have an inner racist within us. The joke about the difference between a blonde and a shopping trolley (a shopping trolley has a mind of its own) is only funny if we still have some elements of sexism within us (as most of us, raised and living in patriarchal societies almost inevitably do).

If on the other hand, the underlying worldview is the desire to negotiate - to work things out - with the other you become sensitive about what you can say, when and where about such group. You are also careful about what type of behaviours you choose to engage in, preferring those that dont reaffirm various forms of direct, structural, cultural, epistemological and ecological violence.

Non-violent communication and humour

If jokes that deal in bigotry, sexism, racism, ageism and all the other politically incorrect isms are the quintessential expression of bigoted, sexist, racist, orientalist, ageist and politically incorrect/hierarchically structured and (using Riane Eislers term) dominator society, what type of jokes would a fundamentally different society with a fundamentally different underlying worldview produce? For example, what would humour be like in a society in which cultures of peace, compassion and non-violent communication are firmly embedded?

Perhaps:

1. People own up of their own stuff. There is an awareness of ones own agenda, underlying worldview, assumptions, perceptions, fears, beliefs about self and others is present. There is also an awareness and understanding about what kind of actions may have certain (violence promoting) consequences.

2. There is an overall understanding that your speech can be part of the problem or part of the solution. That is, that your speech can be expression of verbal aggression or an expression of desire to negotiate and work things out.

3. Humour becomes a means of reducing inflated individual and collective Ego, thus you engage in laughing at self and your own group more often then in laughing at her/him/them. You also do the later, if you must, in a safe space verbally, with your own, removed from the eyes and ears of her/him/them.

4. Reducing your own Ego also means that you dont identify so much with certain dogmatic principles and rules that help define your own individual and collective identity. That is, you take offence against yourself and your own group as lightly as possible. And, most importantly of all, you dont respond to one type of (ie. epistemological, cultural) violence with even more intense one (ie. physical, direct violence).

5. Humour becomes a means of destabilising centres of oppressive political, cultural, epistemological, economic and military power and hopefully a means that can help create a world without institutionalised violence and social injustice. Apparently, the Muslim world is full of Mullah jokes, and as far as I know, portraying Mullahs is not seen as out of bounds by the majority of Muslims. Such a simple editorial intervention could have spared many grievances and intense escalation of violence and still enable expression of the freedom to speak, to express true feelings.

6. There is a consultation with local groups, and various minorities (ethnic, religious, gender) in terms of the boundaries of free speech.

7. You manage to differentiate between different humour styles, e.g. between a Joy Master, Joke Maker, Fun Meister and Life Mocker (Loomans and Kolberg, 1993. p. 15). While the Joy Master has mostly positive qualities, is inspiring, inclusive, warm hearted, innocent, humanising and healing (ibid.) Life Mocker has mostly negative qualities, and is cynical, sarcastic, exclusive, cold hearted, worldly and dehumanising (ibid.). The positive sides of a Joke Maker (e.g. wordplay, teaching stories, parody, instructive, insightful) and Fun Meister (slapstick, clowning, naive, imitative, entertaining) are to be balanced with their negative qualities (JM: insulting, biting, satiric, stereotyping, destructive; FM: ridiculing, dark humour, tragedy and suffering, hurtful, degrading) (ibid.).

Whatever the societal principles, the main issue is what is the spirit behind humour? Is it to put down others and get back at them, in one way or another, or to create new depths of mutual understanding and compassion?

Creatively, compassionately and honestly dealing with the current conflict over values, freedoms and humour at the global level has become the necessity of our times. It is only by these means that we could possibly hope to avoid a further escalation of violence and also to protect all our freedoms

Author Bio:

Ivana Milojevi? is a Post-doctoral Research Fellow at the School of Education, the University of Queensland, Australia. You can read more of her articles at www.metafuture.org (including the longer article from which this is excerpted)

You can also reach this article by using: Is This Funny: Can We Develop Non-Violent Humour?, News & Events, Current Affairs, current events
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Allah the Hologram
 
Thomas Jefferson's Wall of Separation
 
Podcasts Bring People Closer to Faith
 
Six Sigma Can Improve Government Practices
 
Secondary 800-Year Age of Adam
 
Revealing
 
The Anchor Holds, Tho the Sails are Torn
 
Vietnamese in Cambodia
 
Americans are to Immediately Give Their Country to Mexico; NOW!
 
Information About FIBA - Part 2
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Children & Teens

 

Employment & Careers

 

Policies & Law

 

Automotive

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

People & Communities

 

Food & Recipe

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Banking & Finance

 

Garden & Home

 

Art & Creative

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Companies & Business

 

Science & Research

 

News & Events

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Internet & Computers

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Help

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Hygiene & Health

 
Site Home :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions
© 2006-2008 www.massivearticlelist.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.