Russian humour
Russian humour gains much of its wit from the inflection of the Russian language, allowing for plays on words and unexpected associations. As with any other culture's humour, its vast scope ranges from lewd jokes and wordplay to political satire.[1]
Literature
17th century
According to
Most famous are
Lubok was one of the earliest known forms of popular print in Russia which rose to popularity around the same time. Similar to comic strips, it depicted various — often humorous — anecdotes as primitivistic pictures with captions. Among the common characters was The Cat of Kazan which appeared in one of the most famous lubki The Mice Are Burying the Cat described by various researchers as a parody on the funeral of Peter the Great, a celebration of Russian victories over the Tatars during the late 16th century or simply an illustration to an old fairy tale.[6][7]
18th century
Next century saw the rise of a number of prominent comedy writers who belonged to the upper class. The most renowned is Denis Fonvizin who produced several comedy plays between 1769 and 1792, most famously The Minor (1781) about a nobleman without a high school diploma. It satirized provincial nobility and became a great success and a source of many quotes, inspiring many future generations of writers.[8][9] Other names include Antiochus Kantemir who wrote satirical poems and a dramatist Alexander Sumarokov whose plays varied from a straight-up satire against his enemies to comedy of manners as well as the Russian Empress Catherine the Great who produced around 20 comedy plays and operas, most famously Oh, These Time! (1772) and The Siberian Shaman (1786).[9]
Satirical magazines
During the second half of the 18th century satirical magazines rose to popularity, providing social and political commentary. Those included Pochta dukhov (Spirits Mail) and Zritel (The Spectator) by Ivan Krylov who later turned into the leading Russian fabulist, Zhivopisets (The Painter) and Truten (The Drone) by Nikolay Novikov and even Vsyakaya vsyachina (All Sorts) established and edited by Catherine the Great herself.[10][11] Alexander Afanasyev's 1859 monograph Russian Satirical Magazines of 1769—1774 became an in-depth research on this period and inspired a famous critical essay Russian satire during the times of Catherine by Nikolay Dobrolyubov who argued that the 18th-century satire wasn't sharp or influential enough and didn't lead to necessary socio-political changes.[12][13]
Jokes
The most popular form of Russian humour consists of jokes (анекдоты — anekdoty), which are short stories with a punch line. Typical of Russian joke culture is a series of categories with fixed and highly familiar settings and characters. Surprising effects are achieved by an endless variety of plots and plays on words.[14]
Toasts
Drinking toasts can take the form of anecdotes or not-so-short stories, which tend to have a jocular or paradoxical conclusion, and ending with "So here's to, let's drink for the..." with a witty punchline referring to the initial story.[15]
Chastushka
A specific form of humour is chastushkas, songs composed of four-line rhymes, usually of black, sarcastic, humoristic, or satiric content.
Black humour
Apart from jokes, Russian humour is very sarcastic and it is expressed in word play. Sometimes there are short poems including nonsense and black humour verses, similar to the Little Willie rhymes by Harry Graham, or, less so, Edward Lear's literary "nonsense verse".[16]
Often they have recurring characters such as "little boy", "Vova", "a girl", "Masha". Most rhymes involve death or a painful experience either for the protagonists or other people. This type of joke is especially popular with children.[16]
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See also
- Kozma Prutkov
- Novyi Satirikon
- KVN
- Fitil
- Yeralash - for kids
- Puppets
- Comedy Club (Russia)
Bibliography
- Dmitry Likhachov, Alexander Panchenko (1976). The World of Laughter of Ancient Rus'. Leningrad: Nauka.
- Lev Dmitriev, ISBN 978-5050017154
- Sannikov, Vladimir (1999). Russian Language in the Mirror of the Language Game. Moscow: Languages of Russian Сulture. ISBN 978-5519571241
- Sannikov, Vladimir (2003). Russian Lingual Joke: From Pushkin to Our Days. Moscow: Agraph. ISBN 5-7784-0263-5
References
- ^ Patel, Neha (2018-09-15). "7 popular characters who often feature in Russian jokes". www.rbth.com. Retrieved 2019-11-04.
- ^ ISBN 978-5050017154
- ISBN 9780199663941
- ISBN 978-0521280396
- Dmitry Likhachov, Alexander Panchenko (1984). The World of Laughter of Ancient Rus'. — Leningrad: Nauka, pp. 11—14
- ^ Mice Burying the Cat at the National Library of Russia
- ^ Sagit Faizov. The Cat of Kazan: A Tatar and a Tsar in a Russian perception after the conquest of Kazan, Astrakhan and Siberian Khanates report from the 2006 All-Russian Science Conference "Kazan during the middle and early modern ages" (in Russian)
- Britannica
- ^ ISBN 90-5755-022-9
- ISBN 0-691-05441-X
- ISBN 9781612309644
- ^ Alexander Afanasyev (1859). Russian Satirical Magazines of 1769—1774. — Moscow: Bauknecht and Company Printing House, 282 pages
- ^ Nikolay Dobrolyubov (1987). N. A. Dobrolyubov. Collection of Works in Three Volumes. Volume 2. Articles and Works 1859 // Russian satire during the times of Catherine. — Moscow: Khudozhestvennaya Literatura, pp. 536—797
- JSTOR 125941.
- ^ Mikheev, Alexey; RBTH, special to (2013-12-26). "The basics of the best Russian drinking toasts". www.rbth.com. Retrieved 2019-11-04.
- ^ ISBN 5-87664-069-7
External links
- Richard W. F. Pope. Review: Fools and Folly in Old Russia, Slavic Review Vol. 39, No. 3, September 1980
- Hammer & tickle, Prospect Magazine, May 2006, essay by Ben Lewis on jokes in Communist countries
- Tatiana Stolar, Maria Komarova. Remembering, loving, laughing: Anthology of Russian humour, Esquire, December 2021 (in Russian)