Chapter Eleven (PRACTICAL): The
Surrealist Inquisition (Coming at a
Subject From Weird & Wonderful
Angles)
To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a
new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in
science.
Albert Einstein
…and joke writing.
Me
It’s nearly the end of the course and time to string the students up and ask them
some strange questions: It’s the Surrealist Inquisition! Weirdies, beardies and
profound thinkers love this method of writing jokes. It’s for finding new angles
on old, well-worn subjects. It’s for shaking up the way you think and coming at
things from somewhere else completely. When I tell my students this, they look
pleased, especially the surrealists - I do have some, they live in the fish tank at
the back of the room and blow bubbles at me!
‘But,’ I say, ‘The Surrealist Inquisition takes more thought than the other
methods and I’m not being sarcastic when I say for some people that’s hard. I’m
going to put a series of questions to you. And your initial response might be to
draw a blank: ‘Nothing fits. Nothing works. What’s the point, Sally?’ So I need
you to humour me. Go through the motions, try to answer the questions and see
what happens.’
The students look a bit scared now.
‘This is an exercise in fitting square pegs into round holes and the resulting push
is where the creativity happens.’
I get out my Surrealist Inquisition Question Sheet and we choose the subject of
democracy, which is broad, well-worn and, to be honest, a bit humdrum. Lovely.
I read them the first question...
‘Describe democracy to aliens.’
‘The mass of the people voting for their leaders,’ ventures my first brave student.
‘Breakdown the words “voting” and “people”,’ I say. ‘Aliens won’t understand
that.’
‘The beings on our planet register their opinion about who should lead them.’
‘Good,’ I say. ‘Now imagine you’re aliens watching the beings on our planet
register their opinion about who should lead them. What might they think?’
‘That it’s cumbersome,’ says the bloke next to me. ‘Some alien species don’t
need elections. They can just read everyone’s mind and know what to do.’
‘Okay, apply that back to us and our democracy,’ I say.
‘If it was like here we’d have Uri Geller as President of the world,’ he replies.
‘Or Derren Brown, says another student,’ screwing up her face.
This is a great idea, and for the next five minutes the class chat excitedly about
what it would be like having a mind-reader or illusionist running the country.
They discuss how it would affect Prime Minister’s Question Time and whether
they would end it by saying, ‘Was that your card?’ Election broadcasts might
start: ‘Look into my eyes, look into my eyes.’
I tell them this is ideal for a double joke-web on illusionists and political leaders.
I’m pleased we’ve got a good solid idea, and we’re only on the first question! I
read them the next one...
‘How is democracy different in other countries?’
We kick around the idea of communist states, and don’t get anywhere. I tell the
class it’s okay, because we have explored it and now we can move on. I know
people are always uncomfortable when things seem not to work, but when you
are searching for comedic ideas, not everything does.
It’s like looking for the teabags in a strange kitchen. You have to open all the
drawers and cupboards before you track them down.
‘What do other countries do? Think about extreme opposites to us?’
‘In theocracies, the leader is chosen by God,’ says one student.
‘Apply the leader being chosen by God to democracy,’ I say.
He thinks for a while.
‘Well, I suppose God’s the only member of the electorate,’ he says, smiling, ‘Do
you think they set up a polling station for him and canvas His vote?’
‘Surely God would literally be a floating voter,’ someone else says.
We all laugh at that, and the panic that we didn’t find anything on communist
states is over, as the ideas flow fast from the students.
‘They’re assuming there’s only one God. What about the Greek and Roman
gods. Go to a theocracy and say, “if your election criteria is God, we’ve got
some other Gods here who’d like a vote.”’
‘The Christian God knows where to put the cross, there must be a pun there?’
‘Buddha would more likely be the floating voter,’ says someone else who’s
clearly been thinking about it. ‘He’d be rising above it all.’
The class are now on a roll. I let them finish and read them the next question...
‘ Describe the situation to a child in terms they can understand. Put yourself
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