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Wed, 27 Mar 2002 15:37:57 -0500 |
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Marcelo Ramos Araujo wrote:
>Steve Schwartz wrote:
>
>>"The taboo against "dirty words" and fart jokes took a while to permeate
>>the general culture, as Evangelicalism spread. Queen Victoria may not have
>>been amused, but her predecessor would have. Queen Elizabeth I, of course,
>>*made* fart jokes."
>
>This is certainly not the main subject for discussion on this list, but
>here you really made me interested. Where did you learn all that about
>the History of Fart Jokes?
*I* learned a lot about this important subject from *Oh Vulgar Wind:
A Sympathetic Overview of the Common Fart* by the Canadian physician
Munroe Scott. Don't recall if Mozart is mentioned, but Elizabeth I is.
>I'm with those who enjoyed the flick.
I'm among those who think it's full of drivel.
Regarding Mozart's "vulgarity", I recommend Farts and Longing, a short
story by James Hamilton-Paterson which may have been mentioned here a
few years ago in a thread on music & fiction.
Larry Blaine
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