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[Commlist] CfP: Humour and Conflict in the Global South
Tue Feb 21 14:52:57 GMT 2023
33rd Annual Conference of the International Society for Humor Studies
July 3-7, 2023, University of Boston, USA
*Call for papers: Humour and Conflict in the Global South*
Humour is traditionally associated with conflictive situations, whether
the subjugation of someone (superiority), the frustration of an
expectation (incongruity), or the discharge of an aggressive and/or
antisocial energy (relief). In these approaches, conflict is primarily
considered as an element that causes or enables comic enjoyment. Humour
has also been understood as something that is not actually threatening
but only has the "flavor of being threatening" (Veatch, 1998, p. 175)
and therefore ceases to be personally attacking. Recent debates question
this kind of understanding and emphasise the "dangerous" consequences of
humour and comedy in contemporary times (Berlant & Ngai, 2017),
especially when politically instrumentalized (Weaver, 2021; Nagle, 2017)
or when used to mock minority populations (Perez, 2022; Davies & Ilott,
2018). All these debates, however, have mostly relied on analyses of
cultural texts produced in the Global North.
In the Global South, the relationship between humour and conflict is
also reiterated and interrogated due to political polarisation and
instability, culture wars, and rampant identity politics. Yet, these
phenomena are intersected by historical, social, and political factors
which are distinct from those mapped and discussed in the literature on
the Global North. Divisions along the lines of class, race, caste,
gender, sexuality, and religion continue to inform public discourse,
economics, and politics of the South. As a tool, humour can be used to
douse or exacerbate conflict. It can be a vehicle for education,
misinformation, and sometimes even disinformation. It can be used to
oppress, oppose, resist or just survive. In a context where politically
divisive statements serve as punchlines for those in positions of power
while humorists face jarring repercussions for their performances, it
seems urgent to question and understand the bellicose potential of
humour in the social and political contexts of historically marginalised
regions of the world.
These regions are brought together here not because we understand them
as a monolith, but because, even though they are a complex collection of
peoples and nations across different continents, they share common
historical, social, and political patterns of underrepresentation,
exploitation, and marginalisation. These issues have been addressed by
an emerging production of humour scholarship developed from and/or about
the Global South (see Mpofu, 2021, Perera & Pathak, 2022 and Trindade
2020). However, this production is currently dispersed, as it has not
yet been articulated in a common research framework tailored around
Global South contexts.
This panel aims to bring together researchers who are developing
theoretical or empirical approaches to attend to the contemporary
relationships between humour and conflict in the Global South. The panel
will function as a privileged space to discuss the specificities of
humour studies undertaken in peripheral countries, identify key research
gaps, and propose pathways for further study. We invite scholars who use
conflict (directly or indirectly) as an axis to understand humour in the
Global South to present findings from ongoing/recently finished research
projects.
Please submit a 250-word abstract along with a brief bio by *_24 Feb
2023 _*to:
(diego.hoefel /at/ ufc.br) <mailto:(diego.hoefel /at/ ufc.br)>,
(joao.capelotti /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(joao.capelotti /at/ gmail.com)> &
(rujutadate /at/ protonmail.com) <mailto:(rujutadate /at/ protonmail.com)>
Notification of acceptance into panel proposal: 01 March 2023
*Organizers:* Diego Hoefel (UFC/Brazil), João Paulo Capelotti
(UFPR/Brazil), Rujuta Date (SSLA/India)
ISHS 2023 Conference:
https://combeyond.bu.edu/offering/international-society-of-humor-studies-conference-2023/
<https://combeyond.bu.edu/offering/international-society-of-humor-studies-conference-2023/>
*Note:* The terms Global North and Global South are not strictly
geographical, rather they should be understood as nations, regions, or
peoples that exist within certain power dynamics as created by the past
(colonialism, imperialism) and maintained by the conditions of the
present (globalisation, global capitalism).
*References*
Berlant, L. & Ngai, S. (2017). Comedy Has Issues. Critical Inquiry 43,
pp. 233-249. doi: 10.1086/689666
Davies, H., & Ilott, S. (Eds.). (2019). Comedy and the Politics of
Representation: Mocking the Weak. Palgrave Macmillan.
Mpofu, S. (Ed.). (2021). The politics of laughter in the Social Media
Age: Perspectives from the global south. Springer International
Publishing AG.
Nagle, A. (2017). Kill All Normies: Online Culture Wars from 4Chan and
Tumblr to Trump and the Alt-Right. Zero Books.
Perera, S., & Pathak, D. N. (Eds.). (2022). Humour and the Performance
of Power in South Asia: Anxiety, Laughter and Politics in Unstable
Times. Routledge.
Perez, R. (2022). The Souls of White Jokes: How Racist Humor Fuels White
Supremacy. Stanford University Press.
Trindade, L. V. (2020). No Laughing Matter: Race Joking and Resistance
in Brazilian Social Media. Vernon Press.
Veatch, T., (1998). A Theory of Humor. Humor, pp. 161-215. doi:
10.1515/humr.1998.11.2.161
Weaver, S. (2021). Images of Populism and Anti-Populism in United
Kingdom National Newspapers about Brexit. Brunel University
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