The uses of humor in life, neurosis and in psychotherapy: Part 1

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Abstract

Joy and sadness, the comic and the tragic, making jokes and telling jokes, have been known in life, literature, the theater, and art since the dawn of civilization. Following in the footsteps of classical antiquity, Freud added to the philosophical analysis of humor the insights offered by the psychoanalytic method. The bridge was the cathartic method of treating neuroses, where discharge of affect was one of the foundations of technique, and the cathartic, or discharge, function of humor. Freud's analysis of humor, that "A joke . . . is the most social of all mental functions that aim at a yield of pleasure" introduces Freud's first explicit formulation of an interpersonal approach to the human situation in health and disorder.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)180-188
Number of pages9
JournalInternational Forum of Psychoanalysis
Volume17
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2008

Keywords

  • Comedy
  • Comic
  • Humor
  • Joke
  • Laughter
  • Listening to jokes
  • Pleasure/unpleasure
  • Psychoanalytic method
  • Telling jokes
  • Wit

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