At any given moment you
could be accosted by a prankster — an agent of chaos. Here’s what you need to
know
Author: Moira Marsh
Among the royal treasures in Rosenborg Castle in
Copenhagen, Denmark, is a carefully preserved 17th-century armchair. It once
belonged to Christian IV. A hidden mechanism in the arms of the chair would pin
the king’s guests in the seat, where they would be soaked with water from a
container on the back. When they were released, a small trumpet tooted the news
to all who cared to hear, thus proving that flatulent jokes have an ancient and
royal lineage.
Despite their pedigree, practical jokes and pranks are
often disparaged. As the compiler of one early joke book put it, “If
the pun is the lowest form of wit, the practical joke may be described even
more assuredly as the lowest form of humor.”
The practical joke “gives no intellectual satisfaction”
according to humor scholar Avner Ziv: “For years a variegated industry has
supplied players of practical jokes with an apparatus for secret attacks devoid
of humorous talent: flowers that spurt water up a person’s nose as he bends
over to smell them; cigarette boxes from which frogs jump out; jars of mustard
whose lids conceal snakes; fake mice designed to look as real as possible, to
be placed in such sensitive spots as kitchen drawers; and many more. ... An
attraction to this sort of humor is without a doubt connected to the innocence
and lack of sophistication characteristic of childhood.”
Like Ziv, many sophisticated persons disparage the
practical joke as puerile and devoid of skill or talent.
But as a folklorist, I believe that creativity and
artistry exist throughout society in humble everyday settings as much as they
do in the semisacred arenas that post-Renaissance Western culture has created
for art and literature.
However, to appreciate the skill and artistry of the
practical joke it is necessary to look at the particulars — particular
practical jokes as they are played by particular people at particular times and
in particular places. Some practical jokes are better than others, but the best
of them demand significant skill and talent, not only to think up but also to
execute.
Types of practical jokes
At any given moment, the chances are good that somebody
near you is involved in a practical joke, plotting another or regaling friends
with stories of tricks that they have played, been taken in by or heard of. The
ready availability of phone cameras and social media makes it easy for
practical jokers to record their efforts and post them for the enjoyment and
commentary of wide audiences.
Various attempts have been made to categorize pranks,
practical jokes and their cousins. Folklorist Richard Tallman suggested a
classificatory scheme that took into account the scale, action and the intent
of the prank. Sociologist Erving Goffman arranged these jokes by scale and
elaborateness: kidding, leg-pulling, practical joking, surprise parties, larks
or rags, and corrective hoaxing.
I propose five types, based on the different roles of
their targets and whether their effectiveness requires revelation and/or
deception — put-ons, fool’s errands, kick-me pranks, booby traps and stunts.
Put-ons
Put-ons, also known as leg-pulls, may arise spontaneously
in the course of everyday discourse and contain their targets very
briefly.
Report ad
When visitors ask me what the stuffed animal in my office
is, I tell them it is a jackalope.
“What’s a jackalope?” they ask.
“A jackalope is a cross between a jackrabbit and an
antelope.”
“Oh. I never saw one before.”
“They’re very rare. They come from Wyoming, and only come
out at night. If you listen closely out on the prairie, sometimes you can hear
them singing (pause) ‘Home on the Range.’”
Performers tell tales to fool the stranger or the
greenhorn while delighting the insider audience with displays of verbal
artistry.
Report ad
Piling exaggeration on exaggeration, tall tales move the
listener from belief to doubt to disbelief. What distinguishes this category of
fabrication is that nothing is required of the target beyond a word or phrase
that shows he or she believes the fiction.
Fool’s errands
Whenever the target moves from passive belief to acting
on that belief, we have a fool’s errand, one of the earliest recorded forms of
practical joke.
In “The Birched Schoolboy,” an anonymous 16th-century
poem, the eponymous character excuses his tardiness by claiming that his mother
had sent him to milk the ducks — “milke dukkis”. This type of practical joke
lures its targets into a specific but misguided course of action: for example,
venturing on a nocturnal snipe hunt, or driving to a nonexistent public event.
Effective fool’s errands must find ways to motivate
targets to interrupt their everyday activities and act in specific,
extraordinary ways. According to practical jokers, targets who fail to notice
this playful joking contribute to their own victimization.
Kick me
This trick deserves a type of its own because it requires
neither extraordinary action by the target nor revelation of the joke. By a
simple stratagem, the target is unwittingly made into a performer for a hidden
audience. A sign on one’s back, something painted on one’s face while asleep,
or something similar is all it takes to effect the transformation.
As with other fabrications, the humor is enhanced by the
targets’ ignorance of their objective appearance and by the incongruity between
self-image and what others see.
Booby traps
Where a fool’s errand uses false auspices to persuade its
targets to get up and do something out of the ordinary, an effective booby trap
aims only to surprise — sometimes in an unpleasant way but always with the
intention of causing loss of composure. The jokers’ goal is to cause everyday
composure to collapse into surprise, alarm, embarrassment, annoyance, helpless
laughter or a combination of these.
Report ad
At work, jokers coat telephone receivers with grease,
fill safety helmets with water, or rearrange the keys on computer keyboards. At
home, they put salt in the sugar bowl, loosen the cap on the ketchup bottle or
short-sheet the bed. The office cubicle wrapped in tin foil and the car filled
with packing peanuts both belong to the booby trap type.
Booby trap jokes tamper with everyday objects so that
they are unusable or have unusual effects, and the jokes are effective only if
the targets fail to notice these changes and attempt to use them in the normal
fashion. While a fool’s errand tries to elicit an out-of-the-ordinary response,
the effectiveness of a booby trap depends on people’s attempts to use everyday
objects in everyday ways.
The surprise need not be an unpleasant or messy one — but
astonishment is essential to effectiveness.
Stunts
These pranks require surprise but not extended
deceptions, and while they have audiences, they scarcely have targets in the
same sense as other practical jokes.
The “rags” of British University students and the “hacks”
of students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology both belong in this
category. MIT hacks are widely celebrated for their impressive constructions
designed to be sprung upon the rest of the campus or surrounding areas.
In what MIT students widely regard as a supreme example
of the hacker’s art, the MIT community awoke one morning in 1994 to find a
campus police cruiser parked on the top of the dome (150 feet above ground),
complete with flashing lights and a dummy police officer eating donuts. The car
sported a parking ticket that read “No permit for this location.”
Report ad
Instead of scrutinizing targets, these pranks direct
attention primarily to the creativity and artistry of the pranksters.
Beyond the university environment, public stunts unsettle
conventional thinking. In practical jokes of this type, targets are always
collective and anonymous — anyone who happens to encounter the pranksters’
work.
The (im)morality of the practical joke
Practical jokes are unilateral play. This is the only
definition I have found that can encompass the full range of activities that
are commonly called practical jokes or pranks (the two terms are virtually
indistinguishable synonyms).
They are about relationships, whether between individuals
or between individuals and the groups to which they belong.
Are practical jokes inevitably simple and crude? I submit
that the practical joke in its various forms allows plenty of room for skill,
creativity, elaboration and personal style.
By muddying the clear boundaries that usually surround
the play realm, practical jokes provide a glimpse into chaos. The clear limits
of time and space and the elaborate rules that surround play all exist to
create the illusion that chaos is safely contained.
Chaos is simply the universe as it exists outside of the
social constructions that human beings impose upon it. “Social order, when it
functions well, envelops the individual in a web of habits and meanings that
are experienced as self-evidently real,” according to Peter Berger.
A practical joke disrupts the constructed social order.
Practical joking pushes to the limit our reliance on boundaries and our
simultaneous longing for chaos. Just remember: chaos is thrilling when it
is safely bounded, but fearsome when it is on the loose.
Source: https://www.deseret.com/23451599/prank-ideas-and-history
No comments:
Post a Comment