Wednesday, July 18, 2007

history of farting

From the Chronicle of Higher Education, this article explains farting (or, farting humor as a public performance) in the middle ages as a conversation about the limitations of the body. Neat:
[F]arts are a kind of language. They are inherently social in a way that defecation is not. They tend to take your companions by surprise. Furthermore, farts are an occasion for self-examination, for questioning the extent of our freedom and the nature of self-mastery. We can't help farting; it is a question of need. So part of what the Middle Ages wrestled with when people were talking about farts was this constant reminder of the needs of the body. Farting carries this reminder that the body behaves on its own, and there is nothing you can do about it. It reminds us that our bodily freedom is limited.
Hat tip Sullivan.

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