![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() |
Humanities Information |
|
![]() |
The Masked Fool
The Fool My first direct experience of the fool in masking was watching Morris Dancing here at home in Yorkshire, England. The Morris dancers were dressed up in their usual dancing shoes with bells and baggy pants. To be absolutely honest I have always found Morris men a bit funny! Perhaps I should explain about Cecil Sharp, no I'll leave that to a footnote. The Boars Head Morris Men were dancing in a pub car park. ( Pub short for Public House a place for drinking beer etc. in the UK.) They were doing the usual dances that are related to fertility, good crops and harvests etc. But of course they really don't quite have the pagan beliefs off pat. Mind you when you see them drink ale in the quantities that they did then you would realise that they had perhaps fully understood the pagan ways of having a good time. ( Not to say all people who follow the pagan ways drink lots of ale, just a convenient concept ) What you are probably asking by this juncture is this to do with fools? Well the Boars Head Morris Men had a masked fool. He was complete with boars mask pantaloons and boars headed stick. He also carried a bucket for collecting cash donations for charity, or maybe beer money. He followed the dancers mimicked them and cajoled the watchers for change to fill his bucket. Interestingly I knew the fool quite well and in real life, with out the mask, he would never do what he did with the mask. Being English he was just far too polite! The Boars Head stick became a threatened cudgel, never used, just pointed and waved. The mask was a place to hide behind, for a normal everyday person. As you will find by looking further on this site the mask allows people to change personalities. He bullied and pranced and enjoyed his dual mission to collect money and to protect the dancers from the crowd. Sometimes the children get too close. That is not allowed. Sometimes the dancers space is threatened by cars entering the parking space. Wow! That is not a good idea! But suddenly the fool sets off in pursuit of three attractive women. He rattles his bucket and rounds them up as a sheep dog would. They are pressed into donating generously. He just leaves his dancers unprotected to fend for themselves. The next ten minutes is exchanged in good natured banter. ( The wife of the fool is present! ) The above is from memory, probably about 20 years ago. In terms of mask traditions that is very recent. For mask traditions can be traced back at least 25,000 years. I am certain they go back to the time of the first questioning peoples; 50,000.................or more years? What then is this reference to fools and masking traditions. Well as you dig through this site you will find that the fool crops up in several other traditions. In Masquerade the fool is an essential figure. On the surface he, occasionally she, is the one who keeps order. He controls the children, he stops their prying eyes invading the dressing room. His stick maintains the performance area. He cracks jokes, entertains, juggles pulls faces and GETS VIOLENT. He chases the children with a whip and hits them mercilessly if he gets the chance. He tries to seduce women, and does if he can! Suddenly he becomes bored and goes away to sit and talk philosophically with a group of friends from his unmasked time. As the conversation progresses he introduces new ideas. He begins to ridicule the accepted norm. He questions the accepted reality. He attempts to turns arguments on their heads The Ubiquitous Fool The fool is a ubiquitous. The fool occurs in the masking traditions of North and South America, Africa, Europe, Asia, China, ........................ if you know some more please fill in my blank. Universally the fool treads the line between normality and the incongruities that the world. The fool is both sensible and totally none-sensible. Not that he does not use his senses he just uses then in a different way. He questions and cajoles. He jokes and makes fun of others. Yet when someone over steps the arbitrary boundary, (who decided ) he changes. Suddenly he becomes the quiet hearth cat, the sleeping feline, domesticated, sleek and silky. And as you stroke and pleasure the cat she begins to become claws and teeth and worse growls. He becomes the raging tiger, claws and teeth. What is the role of the fool? The fool traditionally questions. S/He challenges the norm. S/He goes beyond the routine and everyday. S/He crosses the boundary between the physical and the spiritual. The fool knows both sides but sadly does not understand either. The fool is beyond judgement but is incapable of judging. The fool is a go-between, a hinderer, a creator and destroyer. He sets things up only to break them down. To be honest I love the fool, because I feel I am one, at times. The fool embodies the contradictions of the world. He accepts our human frailties and simultaneously challenges them. For those of you who know the symbols on the tarot cards consider the fool, for those of you who do not make some time to find out. Some Examples of Fools in Masquerade Italy In Masks the Art of expression Cesare Poppi describes the Carnival at Moena in the Italian Dolomites. Two Arlechign, a local version of Harlequin, lead the masked group. They are dressed in chequered costumes, with a tall pointed cap below which is a loose veil giving them a featureless appearance. They carry horse whips. Around them the crowd of cheering young boys follows their moves. Suddenly the dash into the youths slashing fiercely with the horse whips, striking vicious blows to the confused youngsters. Panic ensues. A pleasing village scene has suddenly been turned upon its head. China In China, or your local China Town, when the New Year is celebrated the Lion Dance is performed. This often acrobatic masked dance is performed by, usually two dancers accompanied by two Happy Face dancers wearing their papier mache masks complete with large grins painted on them. As the dance progresses through the streets the dragon collects lettuces and money to help bring luck in to the New Year. Around the dragon the two fools pester the crowd for money and simultaneously keep the crowd, especially the children, at a safe distance. Pacific West Coast Noohlmahl During Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch ceremonies in the West Coast Areas of Canada another fool prowled around. He is Noohlmahl. A filthy creature with a long nose from which snot streams he is up for a laugh but should the watchers mention his state, especially his nose, a violent reaction can be expected. Iriquois False Face Society The Iriquois False Face Society also have a fool mask to support the processes of healing that they undertake. These corn husk mask are relatively simple and disposable. As with other traditions the fool plays his amusing and organising role. Playfulness has a major place in many masquerades. In our lives we all play the fool, despise the fool in others and love the fool who entertains. Sadly the fool who entertains can also be torn apart by internal mental divisions. The masked fool is the one who maintains order and at the same time questions it and sometimes on a whim destroys it. Traditionally the fool treads a fine line between the known and the unknown, the acceptable and the unacceptable. Even without the mask I am sure you recognise the fool in your life. The fool is a universal being. Today (15/12/04) I lost my fool, she was our cat. If you wish to know she died of old age. She had the soft luxury of a purring fur to stroke and in a moment she transformed into a fanged biter. She had the gourmet taste of a French chef yet licked her own arse. She refused to go outside when the wind blew, because it was cold, yet sat happily on the wet grass when it was raining and blowing a gale. Tango, the cat, was my fool, just as I was hers when playing hide and seek. I loved her affection and was saddened by her rejection of the food I gave her. All in all Tango, our family cat, was all contradiction and beautifully herself. She is a very missed little being. Footnote Cecil Sharp collected folk sings in the British Isles. Amongst folk enthusiasts he is something of a hero as he preserved may folk songs and traditions. He was instumental in helping preserve the hundreds of different Morris dances. Yet as with the song lyrics he collected they were purged for naughty bits. Anything that went against his strict Victorian morality was censored. The whole of British folk tradition was made "nice". Inspired by Masks the Art of Expression ed. John Mack ISBN 0-7141-2530-X and other sources that I have read and internalised long ago. © Ian Bracegirdle 2004 1 Elderberry Close East Morton BD20 5WA UK 01535 692207 http://mask-and-more-masks.com You may use this article freely on condition that you include this copyright line and URL and that people who subsequently use this article follow the same conditions. Thank you for accepting these conditions. Ian Bracegirdle is a teacher, course leader and therapist. He is the creator of the site http://www.mask-and-more-masks.com a site for all interested in masks. Ian is fascinated by the art form of masks as well as the cultural connotations. He has researched many areas of masks and recognise common links in many ancient traditions. He believes our current masking traditions are linked back to the time of shaman and other forms of magic predating monotheist religions. The earliest masking records are at least 25,000 years old.
MORE RESOURCES: ChatGPT in the Humanities Panel: Researchers Share Concerns, Prospects of Artificial Intelligence in Academia Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun Humanities Council honors CNMI founding father | News Marianas Variety News & Views Opinion | I'm What's Wrong With the Humanities The New York Times The End of the English Major The New Yorker Minnesota Catholic colleges cut languages, other humanities Inside Higher Ed Mindy Kaling and Bruce Springsteen set to be honoured with humanities medals by Joe Biden The Independent OLIVER: Where have all humanities majors gone? RU Daily Targum Notes From a Community College Humanities Conference ... Inside Higher Ed Opinion: The humanities broaden minds Concord Monitor 2023 - J. David Macey named dean of FHSU College of Arts ... Fort Hays State University Marshall library director receives Public Humanities Award MyWabashValley.com Will AI Make my Humanities Degree Useless? – The Highland Echo The Highland Echo Remarks by President Biden at the Presentation of the 2021 ... The White House U-M's Earl Lewis awarded the National Humanities Medal | The ... The University Record Spotlight on the Humanities at Middlebury The Middlebury Campus Catholic colleges cut humanities programs, citing student interest in ... National Catholic Reporter Henrietta Mann receives National Humanities Medals Montana Free Press Tuuri to be honored by Mississippi Humanities Council March 24 The University of Southern Mississippi New Pilot Program Supports Arts and Humanities Pursuits for ... Georgia State University News Register for the Humanities @ Work conference on March 29 University of Pittsburgh Arts and Humanities maintains top 100 position in latest QS World ... University of York Graduate Students Illuminate Lives, Race and Place Through ... Syracuse University News UH unites sciences and the arts with new 'Environmental ... Hawaiipublicradio Governor, First Lady Celebrate Georgia's Creative Community with ... Gov.Georgia.gov. Tulane joins prestigious humanities research consortium Tulane University Why are humanities programs in decline? - Victoria Times Colonist JNBC looks to future as Public Humanities Master’s Program put “on ... The Brown Daily Herald 2023 Cleveland Humanities Festival: WELLNESS The Daily - The Daily | Case Western Reserve University 2023 Cleveland Humanities Festival: WELLNESS The Daily The Daily | Case Western Reserve University UConn Health Hosts 60th CT Junior Science and Humanities ... University of Connecticut Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities Shelly C. Lowe ... UMass News and Media Relations A Message for Humanities PhDs | Mark Bauerlein First Things Leafing Through History | College of Humanities and Social Sciences North Carolina State University OPINION: Want to save the beleaguered English major? Abandon it The Hechinger Report Buggs named 2023 Humanities Teacher of the Year Coahoma Community College The humanities are not dead | Columns | stardem.com The Star Democrat Game Designer and Entrepreneur Joe Payne Visits Humanities in ... University of Arkansas Newswire Center for the Humanities appoints first director Oklahoma State University Indianapolis to host National Humanities Conference – Inside ... Inside INdiana Business Weekly Digital Humanities Meet-Up | University of Arkansas University of Arkansas Newswire Capers Hall Replacement Project made possible by help from ... The Citadel Today Humanities Symposia looks at Civil War letters, food Trine University Humanities Institute to host annual celebration on March 1 Pennsylvania State University Dean presents Annual Research Awards • United States Air Force ... Air Force Academy The 'ideal of what a humanities professor ought to be' University of Rochester Meregaglia selected for Idaho Humanities Council speakers program Boise State University Nowruz–then and now University of California, Irvine Upcoming conferences: Human Sentence Processing; Humanities ... University Times BCAP Scholars headed to Junior Science and Humanities ... Wayne State University Transforming the Future of Health Education: Centering Race and ... Diverse: Issues in Higher Education Norman J. Radow College of Humanities and Social Sciences ... Kennesaw State University 2023/1973 In Conversation podcast: Looking back at Delaware ... Delaware First Media Introducing The Humanities Institute's 2023 Deep Read: Elizabeth ... University of California, Santa Cruz Student trapped in Humanities Building elevator El Camino College Union Cultivating excellence in Armenian studies University of California, Irvine Oh, the Humanities! Splice Today The slow burn University of California, Irvine Humanities Council honors late Edward DLG Pangelinan Saipan Tribune The Ninth Social Sciences and Humanities Conference - Opening ... Arab Center Washington DC March 27-28 What's Happening: Edwardsville events The Edwardsville Intelligencer 2023 Dean's Award of Excellence winners | | College of Humanities ... Utah Valley University FSU Flying High Circus presents out-of-this-world act Florida State News Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies Professor Miliann Kang ... UMass News and Media Relations English's Gretchen Gerzina Named 2023-2024 UMass Amherst ... UMass News and Media Relations The 'arts and humanities give meaning to our lives' University of Colorado Boulder 2023 Humanities Center Faculty Fellows Focus on Critical Societal ... Syracuse University Rethinking the Future of the Humanities | Higher Ed Gamma Inside Higher Ed A Proclamation on National Arts And Humanities Month, 2022 The White House What Should We Do About Undergrads Who Want to Pursue a ... Inside Higher Ed |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
RELATED ARTICLES
Smart Art Investments - Buy What You Love! Collecting art can be one of the most enjoyable ways to spend your money. But a painting can provide you with more than just viewing pleasure. Is America Still Racist? This is one entry in my Heroes and Villains Volume of an encyclopedia available at World-Mysteries.com. Sun Tzu: The Art of War The Art of War is an ancient Chinese text on strategy and warfare written by a Sun Wu, a brilliant military general more than two thousand years ago. It is considered one of the oldest attempts at analyzing and documenting the specific components of strategic warfare, with wisdom that is as applicable today as it was thousands of years ago. When We Was Kids In Chicago Radio was the big communicator, back when I was a kid. Whole families huddled around the speaker of that hulk. Top 10 Questions about Body Piercing Body piercing has grown so much in popularity in recent years that it has become almost mainstream, with more and more people sporting navel rings and multiple ear rings. Facial piercings, surface piercings and lots of others to choose from can make things confusing. Nelsons Last Words: Kiss Me, Hardy or Kismet, Hardy? "Kiss me, Hardy" or "Kismet, Hardy"? Both versions are commonly used, the former being clearly more universal . The easy answer is that, whatever variation, these were not his final words (that is a trick question!). Mars, the Mighty and Marvelous Martius, the month of March, is named after him. So is the fourth planet from the sun and a bar of chocolate, but we know him mainly as the god of war. Tribal Masks Original Tribal masks are often seen by unknowing eyes as art objects in themselves. That is not the case, unless of course they are modern copies. Mexican Living: Myth Busting Myth One: Mexicans are lazy, good-for-nothings.I mention this one first because it is one of the vilest myths and an excellent example of Americans' xenophobic stereotyping. Authenticity of Eskimo Inuit Art & Native Indian Art Both Inuit Eskimo art and Native American art have gained international recognition as valuable art forms over the past few decades. However, the rising popularity of both Inuit Eskimo art and Native American art has resulted in the increased proliferation of imitations and mass-produced reproductions of original Native arts. Painting as a Spiritual Expression Is a painting no more than a piece of paper with lines and color or is it more than that? In the hands of the master painter, who is painting in the spirit; the lifeless piece of paper with its lines and colors, is transformed into a creation that has life, just as the master creator gave life to his creation. The painter transmits the essence of his spirit to his creation, the "painting. Man and His Machines A woman creates life from her womb, and man tries to create life through his machines.I have always had a close relationship to machines, any kind of machine. Return to Ouvea, New Caledonia "Ouvea is everything you'd expect in a South Pacific island. Twenty kilometers of unbroken white sands border the lagoon on the west side of the island and extend far out from shore to give the water a turquoise hue. The Beothuk Canada is an emancipated country in the relative scheme of things. But it has a dark history that some people aren't aware of, and others would like to keep it that way. History of the Royal Barges - a Timeless Tradition The history of the royal barges dates back to the Sukhothai era in the 13th century when the first royal barges were reportedly seen. The barges were originally troop carriers at a time when it was more expedient to transport troops into battle along rivers. Carly Patterson: What Makes A Champion? If you have been following gymnastics for any length oftime, odds are you have heard of a particular gymnast bythe name of Carly Patterson. You probably also know thatshe is one of the youngest female Olympic gymnasts ever -and that she has stunned the world of late with herastounding abilities. The Symbolism Behind an Anchor Tattoo and Anchor Tattoo Design Anchor tattoos were all the rage for sailors. It was often the symbol of a very experienced sailor. Working With The Generations For the first time in history, there are four generations in the work force. Although this is an exciting time, it is not without challenges. A Brief Biography of Rene Boissevain the Agate Adventurer and Creator of The Crystal Caves Museum In 1964 myself (René), Nelleke my wife, and our daughter Iefje emigrated from Holland to Australia. I was 29 years old and Nelleke a few years younger. Fictions Galore FABULOUS: - Many 'fabulous' personages and concepts are created by man. Some are attempts to make sense of a confusing array of real things he doesn't understand, others are created by those who would have us 'believe'. ![]() |
home | site map |
© 2006 |