Om When Comedy Goes Wrong
It's time to look at what is not so funny about funny business. While conventional wisdom has it that humor embodies a spirit of renewal and humility, a new, dispirited form of comedy has begun to thrive in today's media-saturated and politically charged environment.
When Comedy Goes Wrong examines how, from the late-twentieth to the early twenty-first century, a certain comic dispirit has found various platforms for disheartening cultural politics. From the calculated follies on talk radio programs like the Rush Limbaugh Show through the anticomedy in the movie Joker, the charades of "cancel culture," the carnivalesque antics of participants in the Capitol insurrection, and ultimately to so-called Alt-Right comedy, the transgressions and improprieties and ego trips endemic to a newfangled comic freedom have produced entirely unfunny ways of being. To understand these unfunny ways, Christopher J. Gilbert challenges the prevailing belief in humor's goodness, analyzing radio personalities, meme culture, films, civil unrest, and even the language of ordinary individuals and everyday speech, all to demonstrate what happens when humor becomes humorless. As such, Gilbert puts forth a nuanced sense of humor with regard to today's tumultuous world.
When Comedy Goes Wrong challenges assumptions about comedy's unequivocal benefits to democratic praxis. It goes beyond partisanship to explore the uglier parts of American culture, imagining the stakes of doing comedy, and being comical, as a means of survival.
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