Funny vs Scary

Eugène Thiébault (French, born 1825) Henri Robin and a Specter, 1863 Albumen silver print 22.9 x 17.4 cm Collection of Gérard Lévy, Paris
Eugène Thiébault (French, born 1825)
Henri Robin and a Specter, 1863
Albumen silver print
22.9 x 17.4 cm
Collection of Gérard Lévy, Paris

It’s been said that the line between horror and humour is a fine one, but why is it that the things that so terrify one generation can be so hilarious to the next? And why are so many narratives in the horror genre also full of comedy?

One theory is that, when faced with something new and unknown, we can either choose to fear it or to subjugate it through laughter. The mechanism that triggers fear of something—difference, the unexpected—is the same one that causes us to find something funny.

Another theory that goes further with this idea is the thought that humour is predominantly a technique used to create community within a certain sub-group of people, simultaneously  shutting other people out of that community.

Humour is so often dying ideology (Margaret Morganroth Gullette, Declining to Decline, p. 205).

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