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town drunk : ウィキペディア英語版
town drunk

The town drunk (also called a tavern fool) is a stock character, almost always male, who is drunk more often than sober.
The town drunk typically dwells in a small enough town that he is the only conspicuous alcoholic. Larger cities may have more than one, but this term appears to come from around the 17th century; in the stereotype, when a city grows large enough to house a sufficient mass of town drunks, the area where they congregate becomes known as ''Skid Row''.
== Uses in fiction ==

In fiction, the town drunk character serves a number of functions.
* The town drunk may serve merely as a moral example and object lesson on the evils of drunkenness. This approach to the character is associated with the "temperance" movement, and peaked at the start of the twentieth century. The notorious Prohibition play ''Ten Nights in a Barroom'' portrays the inevitable fall into destitute drunkenness of a person who dared to take that "''Fatal Glass of Beer''", the title of another period drama working this vein. A town drunk who appears in ''Our Town'' by Thornton Wilder is perhaps the most often seen example of this version of the character.〔Walter J. Engler, "A Project on ''Our Town'' for Communication Classes", ''College English'', Vol. 14, No. 3 (Dec., 1952), pp. 150–156〕 Pap Finn in ''The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'' is another famous example. In modern fiction, which tends to reflect the contemporary influences of the sobriety movement, the town drunk may get sober and set about revitalizing his life.〔John E. Richters and Dante Cicchetti, "Mark Twain Meets DSM-III-R: Conduct Disorder, Development, and the Concept of Harmful Dysfunction", in ''Development and Psychopathology'' 5 (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 5–29〕
* The town drunk may play the role of the fool as a source of comic relief.〔P. F. Murphy, "Living by His Wits: The Buffoon and Male Survival", in ''Signs'' 2006 vol 31, num. 4, pp. 1125–1142.〕 "Otis" from ''The Andy Griffith Show'' is this type of town drunk, as shown in the character of Bobby Singer in the CW series ''Supernatural,'' and as are many of the denizens of Moe's Tavern from ''The Simpsons'' such as Barney Gumble. In Shakespeare's ''Macbeth'', the Porter who appears in Act II, Scene 3, is also a type of "comic relief" drunk who serves to temporarily lighten the mood of the play right after a heinous regicide has taken place.
* In a similar vein, the town drunk may serve as a jester figure, a semi-comic proxy for the Wise Old Man. He may disrupt public meetings, either for comic effect, or by dispensing what proves to be wisdom in a garbled and comic form. Or, in this incarnation, the character may introduce the hero to some of the worldlier sorts of wisdom, as well as forming a contrast to his truly heroic character. One prototype for this version of the town drunk is supplied by Shakespeare's Falstaff, who appears in both parts of ''Henry IV'' and in ''The Merry Wives of Windsor''. Another would be the drunk who appears in ''Team America: World Police'' at the low point of the film, where his drunken ramblings inspire the hero to save the world.
* In the ''Family Guy'' episode "Peter's Two Dads", Peter is at first dismayed to discover that his Irish biological father, Mickey McFinnigan, is the town drunk. It turns out that in the town, being the town drunk is a respected and honored title.
* In the television series ''Once Upon a Time'', after the Dark Curse is cast, the dwarf Grumpy becomes the town drunk Leroy.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「town drunk」の詳細全文を読む



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