Oxymoronica
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Oxymoronica

Dr. Mardy Grothe

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eBook - ePub

Oxymoronica

Dr. Mardy Grothe

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ox-y-mor-on-i-ca (OK-se-mor-ON-uh-ca) noun, plural: Any variety of tantalizing, self-contradictory statements or observations that on the surface appear false or illogical, but at a deeper level are true, often profoundly true. See also oxymoron, paradox.

examples:

"Melancholy is the pleasure of being sad."
Victor Hugo

"To lead the people, walk behind them."
Lao-tzu

"You'd be surprised how much it coststo look this cheap."
Dolly Parton

You won't find the word "oxymoronica" in any dictionary (at least not yet) because Dr. Mardy Grothe introduces it to readers in this delightful collection of 1, 400 of the most provocative quotations of all time. From ancient thinkers like Confucius, Aristotle, and Saint Augustine to great writers like Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde, and G. B. Shaw to modern social observers like Woody Allen and Lily Tomlin, Oxymoronica celebrates the power and beauty of paradoxical thinking. All areas of human activity are explored, including love, sex and romance, politics, the arts, the literary life, and, of course, marriage and family life. The wise and witty observations in this book are as highly entertaining as they are intellectually nourishing and are sure to grab the attention of language lovers everywhere.

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Informazioni

Anno
2009
ISBN
9780061978333
Argomento
Filología

chapter one

OXYMORONIC WIT & HUMOR

Malcolm Muggeridge, while serving as the editor of the humor magazine Punch, was accused of publishing a magazine that violated standards of good taste. He defended himself and the magazine by replying:
Good taste and humor are a contradiction in terms, like a chaste whore.
While much humor—especially sexual and scatological humor—is clearly of questionable taste, it’s an overstatement to regard all humor as opposed to good taste. Oxymoronic humor, which is more cerebral than visceral, can be deliciously tasteful. Stand-up comics have always realized this:
Life is full of misery, loneliness, and suffering—and it’s all over much too soon.
WOODY ALLEN
We sleep in separate rooms, we have dinner apart, we take separate vacations. We’re doing everything we can to keep our marriage together.
RODNEY DANGERFIELD
Last month I blew $5,000 on a reincarnation seminar. I figured, hey, you only live once.
RANDY SHAKES
As you can see from these examples, oxymoronic humor is sophisticated humor. It’s directed at the most important organ in the human body—the brain. The self-contradictory aspects of oxymoronic humor appeal to a special part of our mental apparatus, a part that enjoys thinking about some of life’s most intriguing contradictions and paradoxes.
The world’s great humorists have had a field day with oxymoronic humor:
Drawing on my fine command of language, I said nothing.
ROBERT C. BENCHLEY
One martini is all right, two is too many, three is not enough.
JAMES THURBER
The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco.
MARK TWAIN, ATTRIBUTED BUT NEVER VERIFIED
Our best contemporary humorists have also favored this type of humor. In 1987, Garrison Keillor decided to bring A Prairie Home Companion to an end. The show had been a staple on National Public Radio for thirteen years, developing a huge audience. In 1988, broadcasting what was billed as a farewell performance from Radio City Music Hall, Keillor began the show by announcing:
It is our farewell performance, and I hope the first of many.
With many oxymoronic observations, the meaning is not immediately obvious, and sometimes the best lines can fly right over our heads. But once the meaning becomes clear, we generally admire how cleverly a point has been made or how creatively it’s been expressed. Take the dread of going to the dentist. Few have expressed that common fear better than S. J. Perelman:
As for consulting a dentist regularly, my punctuality practically amounted to a fetish. Every twelve years I would drop whatever I was doing and allow wild Caucasian ponies to drag me to a reputable orthodontist.
The pun is another type of humor that appears to be an exception to Muggeridge’s observation that humor is opposed to good taste. While some puns are sexual or risqué—and can push at the boundaries of good taste—most are simply good-natured attempts at wordplay. But if a pun is considered the lowest form of wit, as has often been said, then oxymoronic humor may be considered one of the highest. While puns—even the best of them—are often met with predictable groans, a witty oxymoronic line is often followed by an ahhh! of appreciation and hearty nods of approval. And every now and then, punning is combined with oxymoronic phrasing to produce a special type of hybrid observation. In his 1840 book Up the Rhine, English writer Thomas Hood chronicled his travels throughout Europe. Playing on the words dam and damn, he observed:
Holland . . . lies so low they’re only saved by being dammed.
An important ingredient in many types of humor is the element of surprise. It’s the reason we laugh at the punch line of a joke. In oxymoronic humor, the surprise comes in the unexpected marriage of concepts that are usually considered incompatible. It’s the reason you probably chuckled the first time you heard expressions like jumbo shrimp and military intelligence. And it’s the reason knowledgeable people derive such pleasure from lines like this one from Milton Berle:
Jews don’t drink much because it interferes with their suffering.
What makes the Berle line special is the intermingling of concepts that normally don’t go together—the well-known tendency of people to drown their sorrows in alcohol and the much-chronicled tendency of Jews to get a certain amount of pleasure out of life’s many little afflictions, especially physical ailments. This latter phenomenon, by the way, shows up with other religious and national groups as well. The acclaimed journalist James “Scotty” Reston once wrote:
I’m a Scotch Calvinist and nothing makes us happier than misery.
English critic Leigh Hunt might have been thinking about oxymoronic humor...

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