Spring 2015- New Course at Baruch College
Jewish Humor
Tuesdays, Thursdays 11:10am – 12:25pm
Details:
- JWS 3950 Section CTRA (65999)
Course also cross-listed as
- REL 3085 Section CTRA (66001)
- SOC 3085 Section CTRA (66000)
Engaging in scholarly discourse on humor is probably the surest way to actually not be funny. Still, in this course we will attempt to walk the fine line between scholarship and playfulness. Scholars and other mavens consider whether there is such a phenomenon as Jewish humor. While opinions vary, in this course we consider that Jewish humor exists, and that it has its own peculiar characteristics and unique elements. This course will investigate what makes a joke Jewish, employing multiple perspectives: topic (such as Holocaust, assimilation, God); attitude (such as sarcasm, gallows humor, overcoming oppression, self-deprecation); devices used (such as wordplay, Talmudic logic, Jewish or Scriptural references). Ancient Jewish humor from the Hebrew Bible, the Talmud and the Midrash will also be studied, specifically, language-based humor, rhetorical questions, sarcasm, irony, arguing and generally conversing with God. Religion and humor have both been deemed vehicles for salvation and, as we know, religion can just as easily be a force for evil as a force for good. One thing religious zealots all have in common is that they lack the ability to laugh at themselves. Just as humor can close the distance between the teller and the listener, humor involving religion can close the distance between God and humanity – and so perhaps unite humanity as well.
For more information contact: Linda Weiser Friedman, Professor of Statistics & Computer Information Systems