Author(s) |
Moss, Joshua Louis
Morris, Linda
Prados-Torreira, Teresa
Scully, Richard
Soper, Kerry
Kneubuhl, Victoria Nalani
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Publication Date |
2022
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Abstract |
<p>In her response to my article “Cutting to the Punch: Graphic Stunt Comedy and the Emergence of Crisis Slapstick” (StAH 7, no. 1 [2021]: 11–38), Maggie Hennefeld raises a number of important questions about fraught humor and body crisis, particularly as they relate to the radical alterity of risk taking and violence in different historical eras, which I agree are underexplored in my essay.1 Hennefeld’s observation that earlier examples of radical crisis slapstick comedic disruptions can be found in theater, pornography, and avant-garde performance spaces (Ahwesh, Wishman, Waters, etc.) is particularly insightful, and I intend to address those disruptions in my forthcoming book. However, Hennefeld’s main critique, as far as I can decipher it, is that I am drawing a distinction between slapstick and crisis slapstick that does not exist because slapstick has always had a power for “destabilizing the known world, especially during moments of intense...</p>
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Citation |
Studies in American Humor, 8(1), p. 3-12
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ISSN |
2333-9934
0095-280X
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Link | |
Language |
en
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Publisher |
Penn State University Press
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Title |
On Second Thought
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Type of document |
Journal Article
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Entity Type |
Publication
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