Affiliation:
1. University of British Columbia, Canada
Abstract
This article considers the normative and critical value of popular comedy. I begin by assembling and evaluating a range of political theory literature on comedy. I argue that popular comedy can be conducive to both critical and transformative democratic effects, but that these effects are contingent on the way comedic performances are received by audiences. I illustrate this by means of a case study of a comedic climate change ‘debate’ from the television show, Last Week Tonight. Drawing from recent scholarship on deliberation, judgment and rhetoric, I highlight both critical and transformative dimensions of the performance. I attribute these to the vignette’s likely reception, which I describe as ‘dissonant’ – unresolved, affectively turbulent and aesthetically attuned. I argue that comedy is uniquely positioned to spur such ‘dissonant’ modes of engagement and, in so doing, to promote acknowledgement and reflective judgment.
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. The Year’s Work in American Humor Studies, 2022;Studies in American Humor;2024-04
2. The Constitutive Power of Public Debate;Canadian Journal of Political Science;2024-03-05