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History Unplugged Podcast

Bad Puns and Dirty Jokes in Rome and Ancient Greece

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 26 March 2019

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"A student dunce went swimming and almost drowned. So now he swears he'll never get into water until he's really learned to swim." That was a decent dad joke to be sure. But it's not a joke your dad came up with. Nor your grandfather. Rather, it was a great-great- great(x)50 grandfather joke that dates back at least to the Roman Empire.

In this episode we will explore humor in the ancient world. What were the gags and jokes that made Mesopotamians, Greeks, and Romans laugh? Did they have higher or lower brow humor than us? While the argument can be made for low-brow humor (the oldest written joke has to do with a Sumerian wife farting on her husband), the humor also got arcane and sophisticated (like a New Yorker cartoon of the ancient world).

In particular we will looked at the Philogelos (meaning "Laughter Lover"), a Greek anthology of more than 200 jokes from the fourth or fifth century. From gags about dunces to jests at the expense of great thinkers, we see what made people laugh in the ancient world.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone, Scott here.

0:01.0

Before I get started with this episode, I want to talk to you about survival.

0:05.0

In a few of the episodes on this show, we looked at incredible historical examples of people

0:08.8

surviving through incredible situations.

0:11.0

Like Victorian explorer Richard Burton, who traveled through Somalia in the 19th century,

0:14.6

it managed to fight his way out of a tribal attack, even though he was hitting the face with

0:18.8

a spear, and the spear tip went through both his cheeks.

0:21.8

I'm not here to talk about Richard Francis Burton, but a new podcast series from our

0:25.8

friends at Parkast.

0:27.4

And as a question, what would you do to stay alive?

0:30.2

Would you wait through snake infested water?

0:32.4

Would you drink your own urine?

0:33.8

Would you cut off your own arm?

0:35.2

Normally the answer is no, but when the stakes are life and death, you might be surprised

0:38.4

the lengths you'd go to save yourself.

0:40.3

Every Monday, the Parkast Networks podcast Survival demonstrates the human spirit's ability

0:44.9

to triumph over deadly adversity.

0:47.5

Survival tells high-intensity stories of people in life or death situations and explores

0:51.5

the strategies they use to survive.

0:53.9

Some of the stories include a pilot and passenger crash landing in the Canadian Yukon in the

0:58.1

dead of winter, a man escaping from a North Korean internment camp, and people trapped

1:02.6

on sinking ships, and there's many more.

...

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