Information About

Ribaldry




Unlike either pornography or erotica, which play Sex or Sexual Fetish es "straight", ribaldry aims at Humor . Sexual situations and titillation are presented in ribald material more for the purpose of poking fun at the foibles and weaknesses that manifest themselves in Human Sexuality , rather than to present sexual stimulation either simply or artistically. Also, ribaldry may use sex as a Metaphor to illustrate some non-sexual concern, in which case ribaldry may verge on the territory of Satire .

Like any humor, ribaldry may be read as conventional or Subversive . Ribaldry typically depends on a shared background of sexual conventions and values, and its Comedy generally depends on seeing those conventions broken. Depending on your attitude, viewers can perceive this either as poking fun on the poor souls who suffer the consequences of breaking the Taboo s, or as flouting the taboos themselves.

The ritual taboo-breaking that is a usual counterpart of ribaldry underlies its controversial nature and explains why ribaldry is frequently a subject of Censorship . Ribaldry, whose usual aim is ''not'' "merely" to be sexually stimulating, often does address larger concerns than mere sexual appetite. However, being presented in the form of comedy, these larger concerns seem to censors to be un-serious. Moreover, the presence of satirical content in ribaldry tends to arouse the wrath of authorities, who may overlook more explicit sexual entertainments in order to prosecute comedians whom they perceive as attacking conventions they wish to maintain.


EXAMPLES

An example of an ongoing (approx. 400 years) tension between censorship and ribaldry can be seen in the continuing story of the De Brevitate Vitae , a ribald song which, in many European and UK-influenced universities, is both a student beer-drinking song and an anthem sung by official university choirs at public graduation ceremonies. The private and public versions of the song contain vastly different words.

Ribaldry has likely been around for the whole history of the human race, and is present to some degree in every culture. Works like Aristophanes ' '' Lysistrata '', the '' Cena Trimalchionis '' by Petronius , and the ''Metamorphoses'' Or ''The Golden Ass'' of Apuleius are ribald classics from ancient Europe . Geoffrey Chaucer 's " The Miller's Tale " from his '' Canterbury Tales '' is a classic medieval example. François Rabelais showed himself to be a master of ribaldry in his '' Gargantua ''. Mark Twain 's long-suppressed '' 1601 '' certainly falls in this category. More recent works like ''Candy'' by Terry Southern , films like '' Barbarella '' by Roger Vadim , Little Annie Fanny or the comedic works of Russ Meyer are probably better classified as ribaldry than as either pornography or erotica.


ETYMOLOGY

The word ''ribald'' was originally a noun and referred to a military unit found in French and Italian armies in the Middle Ages . Ribalds, led by their "king", were vagrants or other lower-class members of society, who fought with little or no clothing, and whose main objective seems to have been to expose themselves to the enemy in order to disgust or shame them. They were usually massacred by the enemy, but they were considered an expendable unit, to be used before the real battle began. They were also in charge of any Prostitutes following an army, and were responsible for pillaging enemy camps. By the 16th century, the more familiar definition of "ribald" had developed, to the dismay of those who remembered them as a respected military unit.

See also: Ruth Wallis