Laughter in Ancient Rome (75 page)

BOOK: Laughter in Ancient Rome
3.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
—Letters,
joking in,
105
—On the Orator:
aggressive laughter in,
120–23
; Aristotelian influence on,
110
,
116
,
248nn38
,
48
; Athenian wit in,
244n93
; causes of laughter in,
107
,
109
,
111
,
113
,
115–19
;
cavillatio
in,
110
,
111
,
113
,
114
; characters of,
108
,
247n36
,
248n37
; composition of,
108
,
247n34
; cookery analogies in,
124
; corruptions to,
111
;
dicacitas
in,
110
,
111
,
114
; double entendres in,
117
;
facetiae
in,
111
,
113
,
114
; format of,
108
; ideal orator in,
108
,
109
,
113
,
119
; jokes in,
118
,
200
,
212
,
231n4
; the laughable in,
109–10
,
120
; laughter in,
28
,
35
,
107–8
,
109–23
,
212
,
223n1
,
225n23
; on mime,
168
; mimicry in,
112
,
119
,
249n57
; nature of laughter in,
23
,
116
; puns in,
118
; Quintilian’s use of,
123
,
251n93
; Roman character of,
109
; sources of,
110
,
225n23
,
248nn46–47
; style of debate in,
109
; textual transmission of,
54
; topics of,
108
; traditions of oratory on,
121
; the unexpected in,
117–18
; wit in,
111–15
; wordplay in,
118
—The Orator,
wit in,
114
,
115
—Pro Caelio,
comic aspects of,
247n24

second
Philippic,
101
,
245n7
Cixous, Hélène,
37
Claeon (weeping spring),
25–26
Clarke, J. R.,
220n11
,
233n24
; on apotropaic laughter,
234n25
;
Looking at Laughter,
57–58
Claudius, Emperor: in
Apocolocyntosis,
64
; Caligula’s pranks on,
143–44
,
147
;
History of Rome,
133
; laughter of,
133
,
159
; quips of,
132
Clausen, W.,
242n55
Cleisophus (parasite of Philip of Macedon),
151
Clodius Pulcher, Publius: murder of,
100
,
126
Coleiro, E.,
241n51
Coleman, R.,
242n54
Colosseum, Roman: Commodus’s spectacles at,
1–2
,
219n1
; spectators at,
1
comedy: Aristotle on,
24
,
32
; Aristotle’s lost work on,
29–31
; clever slaves of,
254n29
;
Tractatus Coislinianus
on,
31
,
225nn28–29
comedy, Greek: Aristophanic,
226n35
; parasites in,
203
; scripted laughter in,
222n34
; survival of,
86
comedy, Roman: audience reactions to,
18
; eunuchs in,
9
; Greek ancestors of,
203
; inversionary,
235n47
; jokes involving hierarchy,
137
; modern stagings of,
18
; monkey tropes of,
162
; parasites in,
150
; performance space for,
8
; satyric,
130
; scripted laughter in,
8–17
; social relations in,
208
; stock characters of,
8
Commodus, Emperor: assassination of,
2
; court jesters of,
143
; execution of laughers,
132
; grin of,
6
,
141
; jokes of,
132
,
133
; resistance to,
5
; ridiculing of,
7–8
; spectacles of,
1–2
,
219n1
; threats to senators,
2–3
,
85
,
128
Connors, C.,
260n21
control: over body,
60
; of laughter,
43
,
134–35
; Roman protocols of,
133
Conybeare, Catherine,
155
,
238n68
,
259n103
; on Philo’s use of laughter,
254n42
copreae
(court jesters),
143–44
,
255nn51
,
58
; evidence for,
144
.
See also
jesters
Corbeill, Antony,
122
,
247n28
,
248n48
;
Controlling Laughter,
106
; on ridicule,
121
Corbett, Philip,
154
,
258n98
Cordero, N.-L.,
244n90
Cotta, Gaius Aurelius: in
On the Orator,
108
,
248n37
court, imperial: jesters at,
142–47
,
255n49
,
256nn63–64
; laughter in,
129
,
140–47

Other books

The Prisoner of Zenda by Anthony Hope
Tourmaline by Randolph Stow
The Defenceless by Kati Hiekkapelto
Before I Let Go by Darren Coleman
The Song Is You by Megan Abbott
Loving Piper by Charlotte Lockheart
Beastly Passions by Nikki Winter
Goddess of Love by Dixie Lynn Dwyer
Disciplining the Duchess by Annabel Joseph
The Last Juror by John Grisham