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Bharatamuni’s hāsya in Nāṭya Śāstra and Bergson’s Laughter: A comparative study of the aesthetics of the comic

  • Vishaka Venkat

    Vishaka Venkat is a research scholar (Senior Research Fellow) in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli. She is the co-author of Conversations with Indian Cartoonists: Politickle Lines (2019, Cambridge Scholars Publisher). She is working on the language and rhetoric of humour in Indian political cartoons. Her areas of interests include humour, political cartoons, popular culture and Indian aesthetics.

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    and Vinod Balakrishnan

    Vinod Balakrishnan is a Professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli. He is a practising poet, motivational speaker, reviewer of books and a yoga enthusiast. He was the General Editor of the 12-Volume Encyclopaedia of World Mythology (DC Books, 2013) in Malayalam. He is the co-author of Conversations with Indian Cartoonists: Politickle Lines (2019, Cambridge Scholars Publisher). His research interests include Somaesthetics, Politics of Representation, Film Studies, Life Writing and Narratives about India. Currently, he is working on "The Role of the Public Intellectual and the Future of the Humanities". His articles have appeared in the Journal of Creative Communications, Journal of Dharma, Pragmatism Today, Archiv Orientalni, a/b:auto/biography studies, LitCrit, Indian Literature, CIEFL Bulletin, Journal of English Language Teaching and Indian Express.

From the journal HUMOR

Abstract

The paper elucidates the “paradox of comedy”—a perpetual philosophical concern regarding the nature of theatrical/stage comedy—through a cross-cultural comparison between Bharatamuni’s (circa 500 A.D.) and Henri Bergson’s (1859–1941) theorization of the comic and thereupon, fathoms the Indian comic tradition in the canon of comedy studies. Bharata’s hāsya in Nāṭya Śāstra and Bergson’s Laughter become tenable for a comparative aesthetic study as they approach the stagecraft of the comic socio-aesthetically. The comic paradox implies the tension in the nature of comedy, which on one hand has to arouse emotion in the audience and simultaneously, has to detach them from the emotion for the comic manifestation. This is further elaborated through: the personal and social nature of the comic; the absence and presence of feeling; the degrees of the comic paradox through detachment and indifference; the identification and isolation of the character; the aim of the comedy. The authors argue for Bergson’s position of the comic as an ‘outward’ and Bharata’s as an ‘inward-outward’ operation. The study also includes an appendix, which validates Bergson’s approach to laughter as the earliest attempt to dedicate an elaborate study on the nature of the comic.


Corresponding author: Vishaka Venkat, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of Technology, Trichy, India, E-mail:

About the authors

Vishaka Venkat

Vishaka Venkat is a research scholar (Senior Research Fellow) in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli. She is the co-author of Conversations with Indian Cartoonists: Politickle Lines (2019, Cambridge Scholars Publisher). She is working on the language and rhetoric of humour in Indian political cartoons. Her areas of interests include humour, political cartoons, popular culture and Indian aesthetics.

Vinod Balakrishnan

Vinod Balakrishnan is a Professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli. He is a practising poet, motivational speaker, reviewer of books and a yoga enthusiast. He was the General Editor of the 12-Volume Encyclopaedia of World Mythology (DC Books, 2013) in Malayalam. He is the co-author of Conversations with Indian Cartoonists: Politickle Lines (2019, Cambridge Scholars Publisher). His research interests include Somaesthetics, Politics of Representation, Film Studies, Life Writing and Narratives about India. Currently, he is working on "The Role of the Public Intellectual and the Future of the Humanities". His articles have appeared in the Journal of Creative Communications, Journal of Dharma, Pragmatism Today, Archiv Orientalni, a/b:auto/biography studies, LitCrit, Indian Literature, CIEFL Bulletin, Journal of English Language Teaching and Indian Express.

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Appendix I

YearTheoryAuthorWorkQuoting Concept of Comedy/Humor
Around 4th Century B.C.SuperiorityPlatoPhilebus“When we laugh at the folly of our friends … we envy and laugh at the same instant” (2011: 97).
Around 380 B.C.SuperiorityPlatoRepublic“You may often laugh at buffoonery which you would be ashamed to utter, and the love of coarse merriment on the stage will at last turn you into a buffoon at home” (2010: 197).
Around 330–350 B.C.SuperiorityAristotlePoetics“Comedy isan imitation of characters of a lower typethe Ludicrous being merely a subdivision of the ugly. It consists in some defect or ugliness which is not painful or destructive” (2008: 4).
Around 350 B.C.SuperiorityAristotleNicomachean Ethics“The person who goes to excess and is vulgarThese states are vices, but they do not bring opprobrium, because they are neither harmful to one’s neighbors nor particularly offensive” (2000: 66).
1509Theorizing comic spirit through playDesiderius ErasmusIn Praise of Folly“But aided in part by ignorance, and in part by inadvertence, sometimes by forgetfulness of evils, sometimes by hope of good, sprinkling in a few honeyed delights at certain seasons, I bring relief from these ills” (2015: 41).
1548SuperiorityFrancesco RobertolloOn ComedyExpanded Aristotle’s concept comedy.
Around 1550'sTheorizing comic spirit through playNicholas UdallRalph Roister Doister“Than mirth which is used in an honest fashion. For mirth prolongeth life, and causeth health, Mirth recreates our spirits and voideth pensiveness, Mirthbeing mixed with virtue in decent comeliness” (Romanska and Ackerman 2017: 77).
1598Theorizing comic spirit through human traits.Ben JonsonEvery Man in his HumourComedy of humors
1651SuperiorityThomas HobbesLeviathan“Sudden glory is the passion which maketh those grimaces called laughter; and is caused either by some sudden act of their own that pleaseth them; or by the apprehension of some deformed thing in another, by comparison whereof they suddenly applaud themselves” (2016: 24).
1698SuperiorityJeremy CollierA Short View of the Immorality, and Profaneness of the English Stage together with the Sense of Antiquity on this Argument.‘A Comedian ought to imitate Life and Probability. The exposing of Knavery, and making Lewdness ridiculous, is a much better occasion for Laughter” (1698:47–157).
1709ReliefAnthony Ashely Cooper, Earl of ShaftesburyAn Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour“The natural free spirits of clever men, if they are imprisoned and controlled, will discover other ways of acting so as to relieve themselves in their constraint” (1709: 4–5).
1750IncongruityFrancis HutchesonReflections Upon Laughter, and Remarks Upon the Fable of the Bees.“Cause of laughter is the bringing together of images which have contrary additional ideas” (1750: 19).
1764IncongruityJames Beattie“Essay on Laughter and Ludicrous Composition”“Laughter seems to arise from the view of things incongruous united in the same assemblage; I by juxta-position, II As cause and effect, III By comparison found on similitude; or IV United so as to exhibit an opposition of meanness and dignity” (Beattie 1779: 344).
1773Theorizing comic spiritOliver GoldsmithA Comparison between Laughing and Sentimental Comedy“In ‘Sentimental comedy’ the characters are good, and exceedingly generous.

If they happen to have faults or foibles, the spectator is taught not only to pardon, but to applaud themso that folly, instead of being ridiculed, is commended” (2007: 4–6).
1790IncongruityImmanuel KantCritique of Judgment“Laughter is an affection arising from the sudden transformation of a strained expectation into nothing” (1914: 133).
1818IncongruityWilliam HazlittOn Wit and Humour“Manis the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things are, and what they ought to be. The essence of the laughable then is the incongruous” (1845: 1–32).
1819IncongruityArthur SchopenhauerThe World as Will and Representation“The phenomenon of laughter always signifies the sudden apprehension of an incongruity between such a conception and the real object thought under it, thus between the abstract and the concrete object of perception” (1969: 271).
1822Theorizing comic spiritCharles LambOn the Artificial Comedy of the Last Century“Comedy as a fantasy world that has no connection with life” (Park, 1979: 225–243).
1846IncongruitySoren KierkegaardConcluding Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments“The tragic is the suffering contradiction, the comic is the painless contradiction” (2004: 32).
1855SuperiorityCharles BaudelaireOn the Essence of Laughter“We shall find that at the very heart of the laughter’s thought a certain conscious pride” (1972: 140–162).
1859ReliefAlexander BainThe Emotions and the Will“It is the coerced form of seriousness and solemnity without the reality that gives us that stiff position from which a contact with triviality or vulgarity relieves us, to our uproarious delight” (1865: 250).
1877Theorizing comic spiritGeorge MeredithAn Essay on Comedy“Whenever they offend sound reason, fair justice; are false in humility or mined with conceitthe spirit overhead will look humanely malign and cast an oblique light on them, followed by volleys of silvery laughter. That is the Comic Spirit” (1998: 140).
1900Superiority and incongruityHenri BergsonLaughter: An Essay in the Meaning of the ComicLaughter is “human”, “social” and is accompanied by an absence of feeling (2008: 4).

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