Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Laughter as Collective Healing Practice

Recognizing shared laughter in comedy traditions as embodied collective healing that creates social bonding and psychological resilience across cultural divides.

Nas
Why It Matters

When audiences laugh together at Hodja's predicaments, they experience synchronized physical response—breathing, muscle tension, neurochemical release—that creates visceral collective experience. This concept examines how comedy traditions function as healing practices that operate through shared laughter rather than therapeutic discourse. The examined joyful life understands laughter as somatic medicine: it releases tension held in bodies by confronting difficult realities through play. Comedy traditions across cultures recognize laughter's healing properties: tensions dissolve, rigid thinking softens, isolation transforms into belonging. Hodja's tales traveled across Ottoman empire precisely because shared laughter at common human predicaments transcended sectarian, ethnic, and class boundaries. Research in neurobiology confirms that synchronized laughter—contagious laughter shared with others—triggers oxytocin release and creates social bonding. Comedy traditions harness this biological reality as cultural practice. By gathering to laugh together at universal human failures and contradictions, communities heal collective wounds, build trust, and create resilience for facing difficulties ahead. This healing function proves especially vital in fractured societies; comedy creates temporary spaces where people recognize shared humanity despite disagreements.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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