Laughter Essay

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    Laughter is unique movements of the face and body that are expressed due to amusement and sometimes contempt or derision. (Websters) But do we not need more than that? Do we not deserve to know more? Of course. Although laughter is something that we don’t ever really think about doing, it still requires a lot of our brain, lungs, and muscles. Laughing’s medical definition is a psycho-physiological reflex, a successive, rhythmic, spasmodic expiration with open glottis and vibration of the vocal

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    best medicine possible- laughter. He gives back the life to the much needed patients. At heart, becoming his sanctuary, allowing him to heal and escape while at the same time, healing his fellow friends. This novel involves a mess of symbolism, thus the issue in showing why laughter could be a key theme is vast. Look how many of the patients "can't help it....they're tired(52 Kesey) when in reality they are sick of the life they are living. With the aim of laughter as a healing agent, take

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    Gender stereotypes are just one way that the media can affect how people relate to one another. The present study shall outline a different but related issue: media’s usage of canned laughter and its effects on empathy and, thus, how people relate to each other. Due to the subjective nature of empathy, researchers have not come up with an objective measure or a concrete definition for it. However, the general consensus is that empathy

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    Laughter is part of everyday life for every human. Although we do it daily, most people do not know how it works, nor how it helps us with our health. Something that we do all the time is something that we do not even think about. We, as humans, take laughter for granted. It might come easy to us, but laughing is actually very complex. It also helps us physically, mentally, and socially. Although, many people do not agree on humor, we can all agree on one thing: laughter is important. Laughter

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    Joint Laughter Northover

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    In Ernestine Northover’s poem, “Joint laughter,” a theme of love can be seen. A couple realizes that marriage is not always beautiful. The married couple realizes that not everything in marriage is beautiful. In this famous poem the speaker uses imagery to show the joys and sorrows of marriage. Imagery is used by a lot of authors in their poems to appeal to the readers senses. Northover uses imagery to show the reader how beautiful marriage can be. The imagery in this poem also shows the reader that

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    With that, a new idea of Anthropocene laughter is brought up, where laughter is now different than what is was originally known as because what used to make people laugh simply does not apply to this new age. Although one could argue that the previously mentioned play The Birds is an outdated comedy that does not have any influence today, they play perfectly follows the Theory of laughter and concepts set up by Bergson, therefore it is effective today and applies to the current epoch. The Anthropocene

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    define comedy in many ways like who laughs, situations that are funny, who makes a joke, group comedy and emotions regarding comedy. Have you ever asked your self who laughs at funny things? Many of us might of answered humans. Bergson suggests that laughter is only produced by humans and that no other creatures have the capability to laugh expect us humans. Carr and Greeves also suggest that humans are the planet’s most successful creatures in having the capacity to laugh. Although unlike Bergson, Carr

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    depicted in this text is from the article “Beyond a Joke: From Animal Laughter to Human Joy?” written by Jaak Panksepp. Panksepp is a neurobiologist who graduated with a degree in neuroscience, biology, and psychology. This article covered the ideology that non-human creatures can emit laughter similar to humans. Panksepp had experimented on three various non-human creatures designed to discover whether or not they produced laughter, including a chimpanzee, rat, and less exclusively, canines (dogs)

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    asylum. They have forgotten how to live because they are under the commanding rule of the head nurse, and under the behavioral influence of drug doses and bossy orderlies. The patients’ laughter is a therapeutic form. In the novel laughter represents freedom and an escape from nurse Ratched’s restrictions. Laughter proves a vital role in helping the patients deal with their problems. Not only does it help them deal with problems but it also gave them the push toward progress on getting out of the

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    utilizes similes in order to build suspense and emphatically compare evil laughter with rising flames. The laughter and flames are unpredictable and fill the ship with noise and unbearable heat, almost engulfing it. In the passage, he compares the two ideas by stating, “as their uncivilized laughter forked upwards out of them, like the flames from the furnace.” Melville connects the menacing behavior of the crew and maniacal laughter to Ahab, as he also exhibits behavior that is erratic and fills the ship

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