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'''Jester's privilege''' is the ability and right of a [[jester]] to talk and mock freely without being punished; for nothing he says seems to matter. |
'''Jester's privilege''' is the ability and right of a [[jester]] to talk and mock freely without being punished; for nothing he says seems to matter. |
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[[Martin Luther]] used jest in many of his criticisms against the Catholic Church.<ref name=hub /> In the introduction to [[To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation]] he calls himself a court jester, and, later in text, he explicitly invokes the jester's privilege when saying that monks should break their chastity vows.<ref name=hub>{{citation |title= Ethical consensus and the truth of laughter: the structure of moral transformations |volume= 4 |series= Morality and the meaning of life |author= Hub Zwart |publisher= [[Peeters Publishers]] |year= 1996 |isbn= |
[[Martin Luther]] used jest in many of his criticisms against the Catholic Church.<ref name=hub /> In the introduction to [[To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation]] he calls himself a court jester, and, later in text, he explicitly invokes the jester's privilege when saying that monks should break their chastity vows.<ref name=hub>{{citation |title= Ethical consensus and the truth of laughter: the structure of moral transformations |volume= 4 |series= Morality and the meaning of life |author= Hub Zwart |publisher= [[Peeters Publishers]] |year= 1996 |isbn= 9789039004128 |page= 156 |url= http://books.google.es/books?id=zkQFtzp0ZwMC }}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 11:04, 9 March 2016
Jester's privilege is the ability and right of a jester to talk and mock freely without being punished; for nothing he says seems to matter.
Martin Luther used jest in many of his criticisms against the Catholic Church.[1] In the introduction to To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation he calls himself a court jester, and, later in text, he explicitly invokes the jester's privilege when saying that monks should break their chastity vows.[1]
References
- ^ a b Hub Zwart (1996), Ethical consensus and the truth of laughter: the structure of moral transformations, Morality and the meaning of life, vol. 4, Peeters Publishers, p. 156, ISBN 9789039004128
- The King's Jester: Modern style, Albert Jay Nock, Harper's Magazine, March 1928
- Alla: the Jester-Queen of Russian pop culture
- The London Quarterly Review
- The wit of Martin Luther
- The new international encyclopæeia, Volume 5
- Hub Zwart (1999) The truth of laughter: Rereading Luther as a contemporary of Rabelais. Dialogism. An International Journal of Bakhtin Studies, 1 (3), 52-77. [1]