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SoBrief
Only a Joke Can Save Us

Only a Joke Can Save Us

When lack and excess collide, laughter erupts. A philosopher shows why that shock is liberating.
by Todd McGowan 2017 232 pages
4.32
37 ratings
Amazon Kindle Audible
Summary in 30 Seconds
Comedy erupts when lack and excess collide in one moment. Everyday life separates these poles; language itself is comic, overshooting the needs it was invented to meet. Hegel saw this collision everywhere, the incarnation its ultimate form. Chaplin staged it as lack dressed in excess; Keaton as excess tripped up by lack. The shock is not a holiday from seriousness but an encounter with contradiction we can enjoy.
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Key Takeaways

1. Comedy is born at the sudden intersection of lack and excess

Comedy is the result of a specific form of the connection of disparate elements— the intersection of lack and excess.

The core mechanism. Comedy occurs when we are surprised by a sudden conjunction of lack and excess. An excessive response to a lack, or a sudden lack revealed within an excess, triggers our laughter.

The Black Knight. Consider the famous Black Knight scene from Monty Python, where he loses his limbs but insists "T'is but a scratch." His physical dismemberment represents absolute lack, while his defiant attitude represents absolute excess.

Key comic dynamics:

  • A straitlaced dentist waking up missing a tooth in The Hangover
  • A bank charging a customer a fee for not having enough money
  • Jesus walking on water only because his golf game is terrible
    This structural collision of opposites is the absolute sine qua non of all humor.

2. Everyday life functions by keeping lack and excess strictly separated

Our everyday life is distinctively humorless because it sustains itself by keeping excess and lack at a distance from each other.

The social referee. Social cohesion acts as a referee that keeps lack and excess confined to their respective corners. We experience lack during the monotonous workday and are permitted excess only during designated weekend rituals or holidays.

Spatial segregation. Societies physically separate sites of lack from sites of excess to prevent jarring juxtapositions. Opulent mansions are kept far away from dilapidated slums, and the dying are quarantined in hospitals.

The comic disruption. Comedy throws out this social referee and forces a traumatic collision between these separated realms. It exposes the hidden truth that our everyday stability is built on a fragile denial of their connection.

3. Tragedy and pathos isolate what comedy dynamically unites

Removing excess renders comedy pathetic, while removing lack turns comedy into tragedy.

Tragic transcendence. Tragedy occurs when a hero completely disdains the finite world and clings to an infinite, transcendent duty. Figures like Antigone or Hamlet value their desire more than biological survival, viewing death as insignificant.

The realm of pathos. Pathos represents the opposite extreme, where a subject is viewed as entirely finite and vulnerable. This perspective reduces the individual to a pure body of lack, eliciting pity rather than laughter.

The comic synthesis. Comedy dynamically unites these two poles by showing a subject who has infinite desires but remains bound to finitude. Shakespeare's Falstaff exemplifies this by elevating drinking to a transcendent principle while actively scheming to survive.

4. True comedy requires both identification and aesthetic distance

In order to appreciate comedy, one must identify with the comic object and have distance from it at the same time.

The subjective balance. Comedy fails when a spectator is either too close to the object or too far away. If we are too close, we feel compassion or horror; if we are too far, we feel complete indifference.

A personal fall. When the author fell down the stairs, his young twins laughed because they saw him as an authority figure of excess suddenly subjected to physical lack. His spouse, however, reacted with horror because she viewed him closely as a vulnerable, lacking body.

The timing of offense. We can observe this delicate balance in the timing of offense:

  • Jokes told "too soon" fail because the trauma is too close
  • Jokes told "too late" fail because we have become completely disinvested
    Ultimately, effective jokes always risk offense by playing on this delicate boundary.

5. Language is inherently comic because it overcompensates for human lack

Language is comical because it responds to lack with excess and thus marks the first moment of their coincidence, a coincidence that every comic moment reproduces.

Linguistic overcompensation. Language originally emerges to compensate for the biological vulnerability and lack of the human animal. However, instead of merely helping us adapt, it immediately introduces an uncontrollable excess of desire and signification.

The play of words. Because there is an absolute breach between words and things, language simultaneously suffers from a lack of precise words and an excess of synonyms. Puns and malapropisms exploit this structural gap to generate humor.

The phallic signifier. The phallus has a special status within language as a signifier that lacks any real, concrete signified:

  • It stands in for the missing point of the symbolic order
  • Its inherent imposture makes it the ultimate target for jokes
    This structural gap is why we spend so much time repeating variations of this signifier.

6. Hegel is the ultimate comic philosopher of speculative identity

Hegel is the philosopher of contradiction. His philosophy shows at every turn how lack is identical to excess and how excess is identical to lack.

The speculative comedian. Hegel's philosophy is inherently comic because it constantly demonstrates how lack and excess are speculative identities of each other. He shows that transcendence does not exist in a separate realm but is found directly within finitude.

Cracking the skull. In his critique of phrenology, Hegel jokingly suggests that the only way to refute a phrenologist who claims "the spirit is a bone" is to crack his skull. This violent exaggeration exposes the lack in the phrenologist's materialist reductionism.

The Christian comedy. Hegel's comedy stems from his unique insight into the Christian event:

  • God the Father represents absolute, infinite transcendence
  • Christ represents this infinite God becoming a finite, vulnerable human
    The incarnation is the most profoundly comic event in history.

7. Chaplin and Keaton represent the two structural paths of comic excess

Chaplin conceives the intersection of lack and excess necessarily occupying a position outside the social order, whereas Keaton shows that this intersection can take place in society and disrupt it from within.

The Little Tramp. Charlie Chaplin's comedy is built on the figure of the outsider who is excluded from the social order. The Tramp lacks a home, money, and food, but his elegant tuxedo and dignified manners present an excess of style.

The bumbling insider. Buster Keaton represents the opposite path, where the comic character is fully included within the social structure. Keaton's characters fit in perfectly, yet their very belonging constantly subjects them to mechanical failures and obstacles.

The mechanical contrast. Their differing approaches to comedy are reflected in their relationship to technology:

  • Chaplin's characters are comically automated and victimized by machines
  • Keaton's machines behave with a clumsy, endearing human subjectivity
    Chaplin's comedy risks sentimentality, while Keaton's risks ignoring genuine exclusion.

8. Egalitarian comedy exposes the internal division of authority

A genuinely egalitarian comedy must reveal that the social authority itself is not simply a discursive entity but necessarily lacking.

The ideological trap. Most comedy functions ideologically by reinforcing social hierarchies through the mockery of marginalized groups. The traditional "coon" stereotype in American cinema serves to reassure the dominant class of their own secure belonging.

Egalitarian subversion. In contrast, egalitarian comedy exposes the internal division and lack within both the authority figures and the marginalized. It refuses to leave any social position whole or self-identical.

The bumbling ruler. We can see this subversion in the classic Marx Brothers films:

  • Rufus T. Firefly in Duck Soup represents the ultimate bumbling authority
  • He slides down fire poles and insults his benefactors
    His behavior reveals that the state's power is fundamentally hollow.

9. The trauma of comedy is the source of its unique enjoyment

The comic moment is the only moment in which we are able to enjoy our anxiety, which gives comedy its fundamental ethical and political importance.

The enjoyable trauma. Every genuine joke delivers a traumatic shock by forcing us to confront an unconscious connection we would prefer to ignore. Yet, comedy is unique because it allows us to find intense enjoyment in this very trauma.

The moral holiday. We often dismiss comedy as a mere temporary release or a "moral holiday" from the serious demands of life. This attitude is a defense mechanism designed to avoid taking the speculative insights of comedy seriously.

The ultimate lesson. Comedy teaches us that we cannot separate our desire from our finitude, or our enjoyment from our lack. It forces us to accept the fundamental contradiction of our subjectivity.

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About the Author

Todd McGowan is an Associate Professor of Film at the University of Vermont, US, and a prolific author known for his work in film theory and cultural criticism. His books include The Fictional Christopher Nolan (2012), Out of Time: Desire in Atemporal Cinema (2011), The Impossible David Lynch (2007), and The Real Gaze: Film Theory After Lacan (2007). His writing often explores complex theoretical frameworks, drawing on thinkers like Lacan to analyze cinema and desire. His book Only a Joke Can Save Us further demonstrates his engagement with philosophy and cultural theory.

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