Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Fool's Immunity to Shame

Dark humor grants psychological permission to say taboo things and examine forbidden territory by adopting the protective persona of the jester or fool.

Nas
Why It Matters

The Hodja occupies the archetypal fool's position: he can speak truths that would cost a wise man his reputation because nothing damages a fool's standing. This foolish position becomes liberatory. Dark humor similarly functions as a protective mask that allows us to venture into dangerous psychological and social territory. We can joke about death, illness, injustice, and human depravity precisely because the humor signals we're not proposing these as solutions but acknowledging them as realities. The fool's traditional immunity from consequences becomes psychological permission to examine what polite society forbids. Through dark humor, we practice saying unsayable things in a bounded, controlled way. This builds psychological resilience and honesty. The Hodja teaches that the fool's shamelessness isn't stupidity but a different form of wisdom—one that refuses the tyranny of respectability and instead prioritizes truth-telling and authentic engagement with reality, however dark that reality may be.

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