22 research outputs found

    Laughing at lunacy: othering and comic ambiguity in popular humour about mental distress

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    Jokes and humour about mental distress are said by anti-stigma campaigners to be no laughing matter. The article takes issue with this viewpoint arguing that this is clearly not the case since popular culture past and present has laughed at the antics of those perceived as ‘mad’. Drawing on past and present examples of the othering of insanity in jokes and humour the article incorporates a historical perspective on continuity and change in humour about madness/mental distress, which enables us to recognise that psychiatry is a funny-peculiar enterprise and its therapeutic practices in past times are deserving of funny ha-ha mockery and mirth in the present. By doing so, the article also argues that humour and mental distress illuminate how psychiatric definitions and popular representations conflict and that some psychiatric service users employ comic ambiguity to reflexively puncture their public image as ‘nuts’

    The Archaelogy of The Book of Tenesis

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    Les anciennes carrières de Ptolémaïs

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    Sayce A.H. Les anciennes carrières de Ptolémaïs. In: Revue des Études Grecques, tome 1, fascicule 3,1888. pp. 311-317

    The Garden of Eden and the Fall of Man according to the Sumerians

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    La lumière nouvelle apportè par les monuments anciens ...

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    The Jewish papyri of Elephantinê

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    Recent Biblical Archaeology

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    The Cemple=Mount of Jerusalem (Ben. xxii. 14)

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    Biblical Archaeology and the Higher Criticism

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    Inscriptions d'Egypte

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    Sayce A.H. Inscriptions d'Egypte. In: Revue des Études Grecques, tome 2, fascicule 6,1889. pp. 174-176
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