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Are You Havin' A Laugh?

Written by Derek Brigham.

I came a cross this film over at MPI - Moving Picture Institute. It chronicles the good ol' days of the USSR when you really didn't know what comment, even a joke might you thrown in the cooler for 30 days, or 30 years. "We were just having a laugh."

 

  

  

  

Working from George Orwell’s observation that under repressive political regimes, jokes are “tiny revolutions,” Ben Lewis’ Hammer & Tickle shows how, in the former Soviet bloc, jokes enabled people to dissent from state authority during an era when such dissent was strictly forbidden. Bridging the gap between individuals’ lived experience and official state-issued propaganda, jokes eased the cognitive dissonance of life under communism in ways that were at once culturally important and politically significant. “Jokes were an essential part of the communist experience because the monopoly of state power meant that any act of non-conformity, down to a simple turn of phrase, could be construed as a form of dissent,” Lewis explains. “By the same token, a joke about any facet of life became a joke about communism. There have been political and anti-authority jokes in every era, but nowhere else did political jokes cohere into an anonymous body of folk literature as they did under communism.”

For more information about this film, visit www.HammerandTickle.com

Cross-posted at Freedom Dogs. Comments welcome.

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