Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Town drunk

Encyclopedia : T : TO : TOW : Town drunk


The depraved inhabitants of a tavern, from a nineteenth century temperance play.
Enlarge
The depraved inhabitants of a tavern, from a nineteenth century temperance play.

The town drunk is a stock character, almost always male, who is drunk more often than sober.

The town drunk typically dwells in a small town, small enough 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.

Antecedents

Because few people are famous only for drinking heavily, there are relatively few historical figures who inform the stereotype of the town drunk. However, Mad Jack Mytton and his antics would appear to be a historical example. Mytton is an example of one variation on the character, the drunken aristocrat; another example, more frequently found in British humour than American, is the drunken clergyman. American humor, by contrast, is likely to produce a drunken politician, from a local mayor to a Senator --- as in, for example, the ending of National Lampoon's Animal House, revealing the future "Senator and Mrs. Blutarksi". A number of writers and artists have gained some notoriety from eccentric public performances while intoxicated; Brendan Behan and Dylan Thomas are particularly notorious in this respect. The comedian W. C. Fields and his movie performances are often classic examples of the character.

The rake is another stock character associated with heavy drinking. However, the rake is invariably much younger than the town drunk, and the designation casts attention on sexual excess and spending money more than on strong drink.

Women and the stereotype

There are a number of stereotypes in popular culture for alcoholic women. Most of these stereotypes invoke tragic pasts, self-destructive tendencies, and mental instability. The female drunk in popular culture is often a fey, haunted figure, somewhere between Miss Havisham and Amanda Wingfield (of The Glass Menagerie), who dwells in a Gothic past surrounded by mementos of faded glory. Mrs. Robinson, played by Anne Bancroft in The Graduate is another example of this. She is seldom a figure of merriment like male drunks can be. On the other hand, her decline into alcoholism is usually explained in terms that prevent her from being made a moral example about the evils of drink.

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: