Tragedy Plus Time: National Trauma and Television Comedy

Tragedy Plus Time: National Trauma and Television Comedy

by Philip Scepanski
Tragedy Plus Time: National Trauma and Television Comedy

Tragedy Plus Time: National Trauma and Television Comedy

by Philip Scepanski

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Overview

Following the most solemn moments in recent American history, comedians have tested the limits of how soon is “too soon” to joke about tragedy. Comics confront the horrifying events and shocking moments that capture national attention and probe the acceptable, or “sayable,” boundaries of expression that shape our cultural memory. In Tragedy Plus Time, Philip Scepanski examines the role of humor, particularly televised comedy, in constructing and policing group identity and memory in the wake of large-scale events.

Tragedy Plus Time is the first comprehensive work to investigate tragedy-driven comedy in the aftermaths of such traumas as the JFK assassination and 9/11, as well as during the administration of Donald Trump. Focusing on the mass publicization of television comedy, Scepanski considers issues of censorship and memory construction in the ways comedians negotiate emotions, politics, war, race, and Islamophobia. Amid the media frenzy and conflicting expressions of grief following a public tragedy, comedians provoke or risk controversy to grapple publicly with national traumas that all Americans are trying to understand for themselves.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477322567
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 04/06/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 241
File size: 11 MB
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About the Author

Philip Scepanski is an assistant professor of film and television at Marist College. He holds a PhD in media studies from Northwestern University. His work has appeared in the journals Television and New Media and Studies in American Humor, as well as edited collections, including How to Watch Television; The Comedy Studies Reader; Taboo Comedy: Television and Controversial Humor; The Dark Side of Stand-Up; Taking a Stand: Contemporary Stand-Up Comedians as Public Intellectuals; and Exploring the Edges of Trauma: 150 Years of Art and Literature. He has also taught at Vassar College, Northwestern University, and the University of Notre Dame.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Broadcast Nationalism, National Trauma, and Television Comedy
Chapter 1: The Kennedy Assassination and the Growth of Sick Humor on American Television
Chapter 2: Censored Comedies and Comedies of Censorship
Chapter 3: Emotional Nonconformity in Comedy
Chapter 4: Conspiracy Theories and Comedy
Chapter 5: African American Comedies and the 1992 Los Angeles Riots
Chapter 6: Television Comedy and Islamophobia after 9/11
Chapter 7: Comedy and Trump as Trauma in Narrowcast America
Conclusion
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Matt Sienkiewicz

This is a compelling book that weaves together a number of exciting, fascinating, and complex moments in American media history. The fundamental question—how do trauma and comedy interact in the construction of the US national imaginary?—is a deeply important one. Scepanski displays true mastery over both media history and the theoretical ideas that illuminate it.

Rebecca Krefting

Scepanski leaves no stone unturned and impressively harnesses a rich cornucopia of primary sources to shape his arguments. The book offers a conceptually savvy, discursive analysis that spans the 1960s to the present, drawing from performance studies, sociological theory, humor studies, media studies, disaster studies, and nation studies to engage with humor as an instructive tool and social-shaping mechanism. No other text has proffered such an analysis over time and around so many national moments of trauma. This is not just a book about television comedy but a tool for understanding how comedy buffers trauma and shapes our sense of collective belonging.

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