Sharon Bowman
Sharon Bowman
I feel like I have had a breakthrough.
I have always been puzzled by the French sense of humor. Sometimes I like things; sometimes they are painfully, awkwardly unfunny.
I have often, often liked the British sense of humor, and it is world-renowned as full of delicious quirks.
(I am using a broad brush here, obviously.)
But tonight I realized a commonality and a difference in the way the two work, when they work.
The British sense of humor is about how one is meant to conform in a society—and the humor: hey, this is totally not conforming. It is unintentionally socially awkward. Someone (the main character, a Basil Fawlty or what have you) does not realize he is being socially awkward and making everyone else uncomfortable by dint of said ignorance.
The French sense of humor is about how one is meant to conform in a society—and the humor is that one brutally, drastically does something inappropriate on purpose.
Both are of societies that are full of social codes and ways of acting, but whose humor reacts to such a native condition in different ways.
A British humor: ? (Many come to mind, but I can't think of an iconic one.)
A French humor: Moncuq.
I have always been puzzled by the French sense of humor. Sometimes I like things; sometimes they are painfully, awkwardly unfunny.
I have often, often liked the British sense of humor, and it is world-renowned as full of delicious quirks.
(I am using a broad brush here, obviously.)
But tonight I realized a commonality and a difference in the way the two work, when they work.
The British sense of humor is about how one is meant to conform in a society—and the humor: hey, this is totally not conforming. It is unintentionally socially awkward. Someone (the main character, a Basil Fawlty or what have you) does not realize he is being socially awkward and making everyone else uncomfortable by dint of said ignorance.
The French sense of humor is about how one is meant to conform in a society—and the humor is that one brutally, drastically does something inappropriate on purpose.
Both are of societies that are full of social codes and ways of acting, but whose humor reacts to such a native condition in different ways.
A British humor: ? (Many come to mind, but I can't think of an iconic one.)
A French humor: Moncuq.