Lately, I’ve been
referring to Wikipedia to assist me in making major decisions or researching
those unanswerable questions from grandchildren.
For
example, exactly "Why did the chicken cross the road?".
Recently,
on a bus tour of rural Cuba I announced, “Look there’s a chicken crossing the
road!” I immediately was glanced at as
being a person easily entertained (non-American) to various groans and eye
rollings (Americans).
But,
it did cross the road, honest.
Wikipedia
meanwhile has had great fun in tackling this question. Wiki offers the answer or punch line is:
"To get to the other side."
This
simple riddle is a classic example of anti-humor, in that the curious setup of
the joke leads the listener to expect a traditional punchline, but they are
instead given a simple statement of fact.
"Why
did the chicken cross the road?" has become largely iconic as an exemplary
generic joke to which most people know the answer, and has been repeated and
changed numerous times over the course of time.
The
riddle appeared in an 1847 edition of The
Knickerbocker, a New York City monthly magazine: “...There
are ‘quips and quillets’ which seem actual conundrums, but yet are none. Of
such is this: ‘Why does a chicken cross the street? Are you ‘out of town?’ Do
you ‘give it up?’ Well, then: ‘Because it wants to get on the other side!’”
The
joke had become widespread by the 1890s, when a variant version appeared in the
magazine Potter's American Monthly: “...Why should not a chicken cross the road?
It would be a fowl proceeding...”
There
are many riddles that assume a familiarity with this well-known riddle and its
answer, for example by supplying a different answer, such as "it was too
far to walk around"
One
class of variations enlists a creature other than the chicken to cross the
road, in order to refer back to the original riddle. For example, a turkey or
duck crosses "because it was the chicken's day off," and a dinosaur
"because chickens didn't exist yet." Some variants are both puns and
references to the original, such as "Why did the duck cross the
road?" "To prove he's no chicken".
Other
variations replace side with another word often to form a pun. Some examples
are "Why did the chicken cross the playground? To get to the other
slide" or "Why did the whale cross the ocean? To get to the other
tide."
A
mathematical version asks, "Why did the chicken cross the Möbius
strip?" "To get to the same side." Alternatively, the punchline
can be regarded as the chicken "getting to the other side" as a
euphemism for death, and crossing the road being its method of suicide.
Another
class of variations, designed for written rather than oral transmission,
employs parody by pretending to have notable individuals or institutions give
characteristic answers to the question posed by the riddle. As with the
lightbulb joke, variants on this theme are widespread.
No comments:
Post a Comment