Skip to content

Proverbs in an LSD Cult

Richard Bauman, Neil Mccabe

Journal of American Folklore July 1, 1970 DOI: 10.2307/538808

Summary

Folk parodies of proverbs reveal deep insights into cultural understanding and humor. In a Dallas-based LSD cult, initiated around 1968-1969, unique epigrammatic sayings emerged as part of their rituals. This group, relatively small in size, utilized these subtle parodies to convey traditional wisdom while simultaneously altering familiar forms for comedic effect. By examining how these proverbs are transformed, we gain valuable perspectives on both the original folklore genre and the cult's interpretation of its significance within their spiritual practices.

Abstract

FOR THE FOLKLORIST interested in the folk's own conceptualization of the nature and function of their folklore, either conscious or unconscious, folk parodies of folklore forms constitute a highly productive area of investigation. Examination of the ways in which the original forms are altered in the construction of parodies and of how and when the parodies are employed yields insight, by contrast, into the original genre and the people's understanding of it.' One of the most parodied of folklore genres, usually for the purposes of humor, is the proverb. Incongruity and the violation of expectations are among the primary sources of humor, and since proverbs are highly conventionalized in form and content and are generally recognized to be so by the people among whom they are current, the alteration of the wording or context of a proverb, while preserving a recognizable resemblance to a traditional form, makes for an especially heightened feeling of incongruity. Hence the perverted proverbs, pseudo-Wellerisms, and shaggy-dog story punchlines that have themselves become widely popular and now occupy a place in tradition beside the proverbs they parody.2 We have recently discovered, however, a more esoteric kind of proverb parody, not traditional in its own right but extremely subtle in its drawing upon the traditional form and wisdom of the genre. These epigrammatic sayings constitute an integral part of the initiation rite of a relatively small and recently organized (ca. five years ago) LSD cult in Dallas, Texas, and were collected during DecemberJanuary, 1968-i969. The use of LSD as a means to the attainment of a religious experience and as the nucleus for the organization of religious cults has been widely reported and

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment