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[Commlist] Call for Proposals: The State of Political Comedy
Wed May 01 15:10:49 GMT 2024
Call for Proposals: The State of Political Comedy
On February 12, 2024, roughly eight and a half years since his initial
retirement, Jon Stewart returned to his role as host of /The Daily
Show/. In its prime, /The Daily Show with Jon Stewart/ had been the most
celebrated and influential outlet for political comedy in the world. It
had served as a centerpiece for American political conversation during
the Bush and Obama administrations, spawned a raft of imitators in
America and abroad, and inspired countless debates regarding the
relationship between comic entertainment and serious politics.
Although Stewart’s return was hailed in some quarters (and provided an
immense ratings boost for the show), many commentators criticized the
move as a return to the past. In the years since Stewart’s retirement,
times have changed for politics and comedy alike. On the one hand there
is the rise of new global populisms, a decline of American influence,
and the ongoing consequences of climate change and the pandemic. On the
other hand, comedy has becoming increasingly embroiled in cultural
conflicts, even as its media form has been disrupted by new
communication technologies. Amongst all this change, was the Stewart
restoration a return to glorious form or an admission that there were no
new ideas? And what might this mean for political comedy more broadly in
a new era for both politics and comedy?
Twenty years after the ‘golden years’ of Stewart’s original run on /The
Daily Show/, this special section of /Comedy Studies /invites
contributors to reflect on the current state of political comedy: What
role does comedy serve in the political environment of the 2020s? Is
there still a belief that comedy can inform meaningful and/or
responsible interventions in political conversations? How has political
comedy responded to changes in the economic and technological
infrastructure of media? Can politics still be funny?
Topics might include (but are not limited to):
* The Legacy of /The Daily Show/ and its contemporaries;
* Comic responses to new political formations, including populism,
nationalism and the far right;
* The relation between political comedy, ‘cancel culture,’ and
‘wokeness’;
* The efficacy of political comedy as a form of intervention;
* The international and global status of political comedy;
* Political comedy in online and digital media;
* The future of political comedy.
Please submit proposals (250-300 words) to Nicholas Holm
<(nhfholm /at/ massey.ac.nz)> by Friday 7 June 2024. Selected proposals will be
invited to prepare articles of 6000-8000 words which will be due in
November 2024 and will be peer reviewed.
Articles will be published on-line as they are accepted. The special
section will be published as a set in an issue when complete. This is
expected to take place in 2025.
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