Amy Schumer and Philosophy: Brainwreck!

Amy Schumer and Philosophy: Brainwreck!

Amy Schumer and Philosophy: Brainwreck!

Amy Schumer and Philosophy: Brainwreck!

Paperback

$26.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Why read a book about Amy Schumer and philosophy? After all, Amy Schumer is primarily known as a comedian, though she is also an actor, writer, and producer. One reason is that it will be enlightening. Amy Schumer is one of a handful of contemporary comedians filling the role of public philosopher. To be clear, Amy herself does not claim to be offering wisdom.

This volume contains seventeen fun-filled chapters. One author makes the case that Amy uses humor to encourage her audience to consider important questions, for example, she does this when she discusses the trial of Bill Cosby while evoking fond memories of The Cosby Show. She essentially asks her audience to consider whether they give priority to unconflicted entertainment over justice for rape victims. In another chapter, the author casts a philosophical eye toward the action-comedy film Snatched and finds that it raises questions about responsibility: Is Schumer’s character, Emily, responsible for getting kidnapped in Ecuador? Is Emily responsible for the death of one of her kidnappers? Another author asks whether Snatched can be a great comedy and still get negative reviews? What is the role of art and who determines whether a work of art is good or beautiful? What do Amy Schumer and Friedrich Nietzsche have in common? Is Amy a “sex comic” or an “issue comic”? With her typical self-deprecating comedic style, Amy makes jokes by highlighting the absurd, the illogical, and the hypocritical in gender relations, notions of masculinity and femininity, and superficial values.

But the main reason to read Amy Schumer and Philosophy is that it a pretty awesome read and laughter will most definitely ensue.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812699906
Publisher: Open Court Publishing Company
Publication date: 10/02/2018
Series: Popular Culture and Philosophy , #120
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Charlene Elsby is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Indiana UniversityPurdue UniversityFort Wayne in Indiana. She is co-author of Clear and Present Thinking (Northwest Passage Books, 2013) and co-editor of Essays on Aesthetic Genesis (UniversityPress of America, 2016). She is the Book Review Managing Editor for Symposium: Journal for the Canadian Society for Continental Philosophy

Rob Luzecky is Lecturer in Philosophy at Indiana UniversityPurdue UniversityFort Wayne in Indiana. His areas of special interest are metaphysics and aesthetics. He has co-authored many chapters for volumes in the Popular Culture and Philosophy series, including The X-Files and Philosophy, Mr. Robot and Philosophy, The Americans and Philosophy, and American Horror Story and Philosophy.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Dear Amy

Misbehaving

1. Multiple Murderer Emily Middleton
Charlene Elsby

2. Is the Unruly Woman a Platonic Hero or Foe?
Cecilia Li

3. Putting the “fun” back in “non-refundable”
Rob Luzecky

Persona Non Grata

4. Self-Confidence and Self-Deprecation
Camille Atkinson

5. “Brave”
Daniel Malloy

6. Schumer’s Selfishness
Rob Arp

7. To Be or Not to Be Perfect?
Karin Flieswasser

Schumer the Philosopher

8. The Funny Thing about Being Yourself
Gregor Balke

9. No Wisdom to Offer You
Jered Janes

10. Amy Schumer or The Incongruities
Noël Carroll

11. Sexistentialism
Gerald Browning

12. Girls Just Want to Have (Mediated) Fun
Fernando Pagnoni Burns

Women Are Funny

13. The Laughter and the Fury
Leigh Kolb

14. Five Stereotypes that Sustain Grape Zones
Michelle Ciurria

15. Are There Certain Things We Should Not Talk About?
Verena Ehrnberger

16. Raucous Feminist, Racially Insensitive or Both?
Jennifer Ware

17. Switching It Up
Gerald Browning

Author Bios
References
Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews