Sardonicism

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Sardonicism

Template:Search infobox Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


Sardonicism (connected with guffaw) characterizes —as distinct from Sarcasm— not a contumely or bitter, but a ferocious, painful derision.

Origin

The aborigines of Sardinia Template:Lang-la would kill their elderly and laugh while doing this. This is called sardonic laughter, or the infamous "Risus sardonicus", a convulsive laughing, with which the soul is noninvolved. Template:Lang-it, Template:Lang-fr.

It was already established in the Ancient Greece. They also differentiated between cynic (kynikós "to the world opinion of the cynics"), sardonic (sardánios "the scornful laughter of an angry person, with own pain or own damage") and sarcastic (sarkastikós "derision, hurtful speech"). So Odysseus —after he had at last returned— laughed sardonic to himself when he dodged a foot of a cow, which was thrown by a punter of his wife.

Occasionally, the convulsive laugh is traced back to a bitter Sardinian plant called "sardánion". The Meyers Encyclopedia from 1888 says Sardoniasm was a:

convulsive, with heavy changing contortion of the face connected, laugh without an exterior cause. The word can be found also in Homer's Odyssee, 20, 302 and should be caused by a Sardinian cabbage (according to Virgil: Sardoa herba), which screws up one's mouth to a laugh. Who eats of it, its face screws up itself to an involuntarily grinning laugh. Also newer works refer the origin of the convulsive laugh to the plant Sardonia.

Ranunculus

The term sardonic (sardanios) "bitter or scornful laughter", which is often cited as deriving from the Sardinian plant (Ranunculus sardous), known as either Template:Polytonic (sardanē) or σαρδόνιον (sardonion). When eaten, it would cause the eater's face to contort in a look resembling scorn (generally followed by death). It might also be related to σαίρω (sairō) "I grin".

See also

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References

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