by Mary Beard
 sanniones, 262n52; Cicero on, 168
   Sarmentus (scurra), 68, 143, 255n48; meddlesomeness of, 153
   Satellius Quadratus, 151, 257n88
   Sather Lectures, ix, 211
   satire, Roman, 68; psycho-social dynamics of, 41
   Saturnalia (festival), 62–65, 235n41; Aulus Gellius on, 236n49; Bakhtin on, 62–63, 65, 235n43; the carnivalesque in, 235n47; and Christmas, 63; costume of, 63, 65; elites’ participation in, 236n49; feasting in, 64, 236nn49,55; free speech in, 64, 235n46, 237n56; as inversionary ritual, 63, 65, 235n47; king of, 64, 235n42, 236n54; paternalism in, 65; Pliny the Elder on, 237n56; role reversal in, 63, 64, 235n44; social equality in, 65. See also Macrobius, Saturnalia
   satyrs, rictus of, 57
   Scaliger, on Virgil’s fourth Eclogue, 241n54
   Schlam, C. C., 268n130
   Schofield, Malcolm, 227n40
   scholastikos: Cicero as, 190; laughable qualities of, 190–91
   scholastikos jokes, 185–86, 190–91, 268n4, 270nn24,25; about dreams, 197; about teachers, 192; datable, 189; family life in, 198; identity in, 200; lost point of, 272n45; mimic themes of, 271n40; numbers in, 199, 269n7; Sidon in, 271n34; standard lines in, 271n38; told on themselves, 194; visual images in, 194
   Schulz, F., 274n67
   Scipio Nasica, jokes about, 200, 270n23
   Scott, Sophie, 229n62
   Scruton, Roger, 47, 229n63
   sculpture, ancient: laughter in, 57
   Scurr, Ruth, 237n62
   scurrae, 152–55; as antitypes of dicacitas, 249n56; Christian instance of, 154–55; comparison with orators, 121–22, 129; competition with peasant, 126; cultural longevity of, 155; in Horace, 204; jokes of, 103, 118, 121, 124, 152, 153; murder of Elagabalus, 154; and parasites, 153; in Plautus, 153, 258n99; positive valuation of, 154; Quintilian on, 124; in Roman imaginary, 154; in Roman literature, 153–54; “Romanness” of, 153; social role of, 153; varied usages of, 258nn98,101
   scurrilitas: accusations against Cicero, 152–53, 246n15; pride in, 155; victims of, 147
   Semus (historian), 174, 264n81
   senators, Roman: stifling of laughter, 2–3, 6
   Seneca the Elder, 246n14; Cicero’s jokes in, 103; laughter in, 79–81; on Vatinius, 122
   Seneca the Younger: Apocolocyntosis, 64, 235n45, 236n50; on Caligula, 134; on jesters, 145; use of arridere, 150–51
   Serapeum, destruction of, 269n17
   Serenus Sammonicus, 224n6
   Servius, on mime, 263n54
   sesērenai (parting of lips), 6
   sex, discursive practices surrounding, 67
   Sharrock, A., 223n49
   Sicily, slave revolts in, 152, 258n94
   Sidon, jokes about, 191–92, 269n7, 271n34
   Silk, Michael, 31, 226n31
   Silverne, Stephen, 276n4
   simia (monkey), and similis, 162, 261nn26–27. See also monkeys
   Skinner, Quentin, 30–31, 33, 225n22; on Hobbes, 41
   skōmma (joking), 76, 207; abusive, 32
   slave revolts, Sicilian, 152, 258n94
   slaves, relations with masters, 137–40
   Smallwood, E. M., 254nn42,44, 255n46
   smiles: archaic, 57, 233n20; Chesterfield on, 75, 240n22; cultural significance of, 74; Greek vocabulary for, 73, 239n13; Latin vocabulary for, 73–76; in Macrobius, 73–74, 75, 239n16; medieval, 75; in modern European languages, 74; Mona Lisa‘s, 233n22; in Roman culture, 74–76; in Virgil, 73, 84
   Smith, M., 229n62
   social hierarchy: effect on laughter, 28; inversion of, 63, 65, 235n47, 264n72
   Socrates: facial expression of, 25; subversive repartee of, 153
   soldiers, Caesar’s: jokes of, 146, 231n4
   Soli (Cilicia), laughter associated with, 177
   Sommerstein, A., 257n86
   Sonnabend, H., 240n30
   Sparta, culture of laughter in, 93–94
   Spawforth, Tony, 91
   speeches, epilogues of, 125
   spleen, role in laughter, 25, 29, 224n6
   spongers. See parasites
   statues, Greek: non-smiling, 30
   Stoicism, Cicero’s jokes on, 102
   Strabo (geographer): on Kyme, 191, 192, 271n31; on monkeys, 164–65
   Strabo, Julius Caesar: in On the Orator, 108, 109, 110, 111, 113, 116, 120, 223n1, 249nn58,61
   subjects, laughter at experimenters, 229n58
   subridere (to laugh), 73, 75
   Suda, 269n10; on Philogelos, 188
   Suetonius, 73; on Caesar’s joking, 252n2; on Caligula, 134; on Claudius’s quips, 132; on copreae, 143; Life of Augustus, 134; mimicry in, 263n64; on Vespasian, 133–34, 146
   Sulla: love of laughter, 129–30, 207; satyric comedies of, 130
   Sybarites, jokes on, 206, 275n80
   Tacitus: on German laughter, 52; on Nero, 236n54; on ridicule, 232n6
   Tarentines, laughter at Romans, 4, 6, 220n10
   Terence: modern translations of, 16; stage directions for, 16
   —The Eunuch: adaptation of Menander, 90–91; adridere in, 71–72; audience reaction to, 15–17; causes of laughter in, 11–12, 14; characters of, 9–10; Donatus on, 12, 13, 221n30, 222n38, 223n47; flattery in, 141; Greek jokes in, 89–91; jokes of, 9–12, 14, 18, 176–77, 205, 222n37; parasite of, 10–11, 12, 90, 148, 221n29; performances of, 221n28; popularity of, 8, 221n26; scripted laughter in, 8–11, 14, 16; sources of, 243n74
   —Heauton Timorumenus, scripted laughter in, 16–17
   Tertullian: on Crassus the agelast, 178; on mime, 168
   Testamentum Porcelli, 266n98
   theater, Roman, 8; during Megalesia festival, 9; “monkey business” of, ix; oratory and, 251n82. See also comedy, Roman; mime
   theatergoers, ancient: shared experiences of, 15
   Theocritus, 242n60
   Theophrastus: De aquis, 224n12; Pliny the Elder’s use of, 26–27, 30
   Thierfelder, A., 269n7, 272n50
   Thomas, Keith, 59, 61, 234n29; on continuity of laughter, 66; on early English laughter, 50; on hearing laughter, 52; Neale Lecture of, 231n3
   threats, laughter at, 2–3
   Tiberius, Emperor: banquets of, 145; court jesters of, 143, 144–45, 256n63; stinginess of, 153
   tickling, 39; Aristotle on, 35; Darwin-Hecker hypothesis of, 230n74; Pliny the Elder on, 25, 34–35; in Problems, 43, 230n73; of rats, 47; social conditions of, 43
   Tiro, compendium of Cicero’s jokes, 104, 246n17
   Titius Maximus, 139, 254n39
   toadies. See parasites
   tombs, jokes on, 189, 270n21
   totalitarianism: laughter in, 225n26; resistance through laughter, 5, 30, 220n17
   Tractatus Coislinianus, on comedy, 31, 225nn28–29
   Trajan, Emperor: civilitas of, 131
   Trebonius, Gaius, 104
   Trollope, Anthony: death from laughter, 177, 265n92
   Trophonius, oracle: loss of laughter at, 174–75
   truth and falsehood, in Roman laughter, 125–26, 129
   Tunbridge Wells, jokes about, 271n30
   Turnbull, Colin, 231n79; The Forest People, 45–46
   Twain, Mark, 56; A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, 53
   tyrants: control of laughter, 134; jokes of, 129, 130
   Tzetzes, John, 269n9; use of Philogelos, 187
   the unexpected, laughter at, 117–18
   urbanitas: changing ideas of, 250n67; Cicero’s, 103; Domitius Marsus on, 124; Quintilian on, 125
   urbanus sal, 126, 252n107
   urine, in fulling industry, 196, 272n52
   Valerius Maximus, 266n112; on death by laughter, 177; jokes in, 214, 252n10
   Vatinius: Cicero’s attack on, 106, 122–23, 251n89; jokes on himself, 251n101; relationship with Cicero, 122–23, 251n90
   Vatinius (court jester), 143
   Velleius Paterculus, History of Rome, 189
   Venus, laughter of, 81
   Verrius Flaccus, 264n73; on Zeuxis, 172–73
   Versnel, H. S., 235n44
   Vespasian, Emperor: civilitas of, 130; 
dicacitas of, 153; funeral procession of, 146, 256n72; jocularity of, 133–34
   Victoria, Queen, 237n60
   Virgil: Diocletian’s quoting of, 13; words for laughter, 75; words for smiles, 73
   —Aeneid: interpretation of Homeric laughter, 88–89; laughter in, 81
   —Eclogue 4: Christian readings of, 84; laughter in, 81–85; manuscript tradition of, 83, 242nn54,64; Quintilian on, 83; Renaissance readings of, 241n54; smiling in, 84; textual emendations to, 82–83; translations of, 84, 242n59
   —Eclogues: mime parodies of, 169, 263n57
   visual images, ancient: of laughter, 49, 56–59, 162–63, 165, 166, 233n24; religious, 175
   Vitalis (mime actor), 169
   Vollgraff, C. G., 267n127
   Volumnius Eutrapelus, Publius, 105, 113
   Wallace-Hadrill, Andrew, 91, 274n67; Rome’s Cultural Revolution, 87
   Walsh, P. G., 266n104
   Warner, Marina, 85
   water, laughter-causing, 25–26
   West, S., 271n39
   Whigham, Peter, 171
   Whitehead, A. N., 225n24
   whoopee cushions, Elagabalus’s use of, 77, 128
   Wilkins, J., 275n81
   Wilkins, A. S., 249n55
   Winkler, Jack: Auctor & Actor, 181, 183
   wit: collections of, 204, 206; construction of identity through, 247n29; as educated insolence, 33; moralizing, 206; Peripatetic terms for, 249n65; Sicilian, 204. See also jokes
   wit, Athenian, 94–95, 204; Cicero on, 244n93; Roman admiration for, 94
   wit, Roman: Cicero’s, 100–108; collections of, 202; desirable types of, 115; salsum, 115; typology of, 114, 250nn67,69; vocabulary for, 76
   wit, Roman oratorical: analogies with cookery, 124; changing terms for, 114; Cicero’s deployment of, 105–8; dicto and re, 112, 113, 123; in epilogues of speeches, 125; exploitation of names, 120; forms of, 111, 113–15; inappropriate use of, 103–4, 112–13, 118–19, 123, 129; old Latin terms for, 111, 249n54; in On the Orator, 111–15; Quintilian on, 123–26; restraint in, 120–21; rules for using, 112–13, 117, 120–21, 122; spontaneous, 111, 127, 249n55. See also laughter, Roman oratorical
   Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 229n64
   women, giggling, 3, 157, 219n7
   women, Roman: dimples of, 158, 259n8; jokes of, 156; mime actresses, 159, 167–68, 171, 264n66; in pantomime, 255n62. See also laughter, Roman women’s
   women, Spartan: use of ridicule, 93
   Wyatt, Woodrow, 276n4
   Wyles, R., 262n50
   Xanthus (master of Aesop), 138–39
   Xenophon, Symposium, 257n81; parasite of, 149
   Xerxes, at the Hellespont, 134, 253n20
   Zeno of Sidon, 153, 258n96
   Zeuxis: competition with Parrhasius, 173; death from laughter, 14, 172–73, 177; illusionism of, 173, 234n24
   Zimmerman, A., 266n107, 267n113
   Žižek, Slavoj, 220n17, 225n26
   Zoroaster, laughter of, 25, 83, 242n56