Humour, Subjectivity and World Politics: Everyday Articulations of Identity at the Limits of Order
By (Author) Alister Wedderburn
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
17th August 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Humour
Cultural studies
809.7
Hardback
216
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 14mm
404g
Questions about the ethical and political boundaries of comedy, satire, or irony have inspired widespread anxiety in recent years, as with the 2015 shootings at the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris, or the so called locker-room banter that defined Donald Trumps 2016 election campaign. What, then, can a turn to humour offer International Relations
Drawing on literature across International Relations, literary theory, cultural studies and sociology, Alister Wedderburn argues that humour plays an underappreciated role in the making and unmaking of political subjectivities. The book recovers a historical understanding of humour as a way of making a claim to political subjectivity in the face of its denial. This function, Wedderburn argues, is embodied by the ambiguous figure of the parasite, a stock character of Greek comic drama. The book interrogates three separate sites where political actors have used humour parasitically in order to make political claims and demands. In so doing, it not only outlines humours political potential and limitations, but also demonstrates how everyday practices can draw from, feed into, interrupt, and potentially transform global-political relations.
Representing the first monograph-length study on the politics of humour within International Relations, this book makes a timely contribution to debates about the politics of humour, subjectivity and everyday life.
Alister Wedderburn is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Glasgow