Dead baby jokes
Dead baby jokes are a
History
According to the folklorist scholar Alan Dundes, the dead baby joke cycle likely began in the early 1960s.[1] Dundes theorizes that the origin of the dead baby joke lies in the rise of second-wave feminism in the U.S. during that decade and its rejection of the traditional societal role for women, which included support for legalized abortion and contraceptives.[2][3] It has also been suggested that the jokes emerged in response to images of graphic violence, often involving infants, from the Vietnam War.[4]
Examples
What's the difference between a truckload of dead babies and a truckload of bowling balls?
With bowling balls you can't use pitchforks.[5]
What's more fun than nailing a baby to a post?
Ripping it off again.[6]
What's bright blue, pink, and sizzles?
A baby breastfeeding on an electrical outlet.[6]
How do you get 100 dead babies into a box?
With a blender![6]
How do you get them out of the box?
With nacho chips![6]
How many babies does it take to paint a house?
Depends on how hard you throw them.[6]
Why did the dead baby cross the road?
Because it was stapled to the chicken.[6]
See also
References
- ^ PMID 11633558.
- ^ "Jokes are a serious, 'psychic' business", San Francisco Examiner
- ^ "That's Not Funny - That's Sick // Folklorist Alan Dundes looks at the serious side of sick jokes". St. Petersburg Times. 2 December 1987.
- ISBN 9780874830682.
- JSTOR 25117878.
- ^ a b c d e f Warner, Andrew (2008). P.S. Dead Baby Jokes Aren't Funny: The Grotesque in Sick Humor (M.A.). Truman State University.