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A sketch comedy of errors: Chappelle's show, stereotypes, and viewersPerks, Lisa Glebatis 29 August 2008 (has links)
Celebrities such as Halle Berry, Dave Chappelle, Kathy Griffin, and Don Imus have recently evoked public ire for making what some people have seen as tasteless jokes. Their notorious humorous communication shares two notable qualities: the discourse was mass mediated and the “jokes” were all premised on stereotypes. This two-part dissertation addresses the complicated subject of understanding the meanings viewers co-create with humorous mediated communication that is premised on racial stereotypes. I focus on Chappelle’s Show as my primary text of analysis, but the findings here have applicability to the wider genre of humorous mediated communication that is premised on stereotypes. In the first part of the dissertation I survey humor theory and humor criticism, noting weaknesses in the ways that communication scholars have previously studied humorous mediated texts. I then suggest that humor scholarship can be improved through two principal methods: 1. humor scholars of various academic disciplines need to use a unified set of terms that refer to the humor stimulus, humor motivation, and the possible effects of the humor, and 2. critics of humorous mediated texts need to approach them as a unique genre, with a critical lens that accounts for the polysemy inherent in many humorous texts. In the next part of the dissertation, I model a multi-methodological approach to mining the mélange of meanings in Chappelle’s Show. My in-depth case study of racial stereotype-based humor in Chappelle’s Show incorporates textual analysis of a dozen sketches, qualitative analysis of viewer opinions about the show, and a quantitative analysis of viewing behaviors as well as the relationship between viewing the show and prejudice. This multi-methodological approach helps better mine the polysemic meanings of the text because it explores the spectrum of the communication model from stimulus to receiver. I conclude that Chappelle’s Show can both encourage and reduce prejudice. While inconclusive conclusions are an anomaly in media criticism, I advocate the pursuit of such conclusions in humor criticism. Stereotype-based mediated comedic texts demand an exploration of their multiple meanings, not a definitive statement about how they should be interpreted or how they affect an audience. / text
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Uppochnervända roller hemma hos Martina : En undersökning av den självförringande humorns subversiva kraft i Martina Haags Hemma hos MartinaBonnard, Erika January 2006 (has links)
Martina Haag’s method of self-mockery used in her chronicles is characterized by her wish to live up to various ideals. This essay brings out the subversive power of self-deprecatory hu-mor expressed in her book Hemma hos Martina. The author’s strategies and kinds of humor are being studied, leading up to what this humor accomplishes. General theories on humor, by Mary Ann Rishel, Maria Ohlsson, Henri Bergson, Joannne R. Gilbert and Simon Critchley are being applied to find the essence of her craftsmanship in writing comedy. The analysis also goes more closely into the style and language, to give a deeper understanding of how she creates jokes, and also how she relates to her ideals through language. The main thrust of the analysis, though, builds on theories on self-deprecatory humor. Haag is included into Joanne R. Gilbert’s theory on self-deprecation and The Whiner within the field of stand-up comedy. Some American feminist critics have rejected self-deprecatory humor as being anti-feminist, stating that women applying this particular kind of humor merely reinforce stereoty-pes, and put themselves down. This paper objects to those critics, leaning on Haag’s book. I wish to show that Haag is not demeaning towards herself, but towards the cultural norms and expectations in our present society. In this context, I show how Haag manages to demystify and criticize ideal representations of women, by lampooning them and revolting against them. In this way, her book turns into a satirical critique of cultural values. My essay illustrates how Haag objectifies herself, making regular use of stereotypes. This is necessary, since these two elements are essential to most humor. Haag confirms stereotypes to make people laugh. This laughter brings about awareness in the reader, making Haag’s work a social critique of current values and norms concerning women.
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William Shakespeare's Parable of "Is" and "Seems": Ironies of God's Providence in <i>Hamlet</i> and <i>Measure for Measure</i>Kelly, Joseph L. 01 August 2010 (has links)
This thesis examines Hamlet and Measure for Measure as related “problem plays.” In these plays, Shakespeare uniquely combines the genre of parable and the literary device of irony as a means to involve his audience in the experience of ordeal and deliverance that both reorients the protagonists’ personal, political, and ultimately theological assumptions and prompts spiritual insight in the spectator. As in a parable, a spiritual dimension opens subtly alongside each story to inform the play’s action and engage the spectator in the underlying theological discourse. Irony invites the audience to see the disparity between pretended or mistaken reality and the spiritual truth—between what “seems” and what “is.” As these complex dramatized parables unfold, potent tapestries of multilayered thematic irony coalesce into providential irony that exalts, rather than defeats, the protagonists and ultimately determines the outcome.
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Humour as "cultural reconciliation" in South African situation comedy : an ethnographic study of multicultural female viewers.Roome, Dorothy M. January 1998 (has links)
South African women of different ethnicity and background, having lived under apartheid, are
now challenged by the freedoms expressed in the Bill of Rights and the new Constitution. This
study, identifying the connections between gender, race, class and social relations, incorporates
an ethnographic methodology and a cultural studies perspective in the reception analysis of
thirteen multicultural focus groups. In the analysis of their response to two locally produced
situation comedies, Suburban Bliss and Going Up III, the effort to determine existing cultural
barriers is made, examining laughter as a benchmark for the comprehension by women from
different backgrounds. The theoretical framework for the research evaluates the extent to which
the writers, producers and directors created a text which connects with the multicultural women
viewers' reality. Changes affecting the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) in terms
of broadcasting policy, are traced, and a brief history of the organization since the inception of
broadcasting in South Africa is incorporated. Language policy had ret1ected the overt political
ideology of Afrikaner nationalism, consequently the political changes resulting from the 1994
democratic election led to major transformations in language and style of programming to
incorporate local content for multicultural audiences. This caused economic hardship for the
SABC, as advertising revenue was drastically curtailed.
Textual analysis of both Suburban Bliss and Going Up III employed a mix of structural,
semiotics, and ideological analysis. Through interviews with the production team it became
apparent that SB was based on American sitcom genre, while GU III is a hybrid combination,
conceived to meet the perceived needs of the local multilingual multicultural audience. The extent
to which the programmes mediate the producer/audience relationship, contributing to the
hegemonic process is investigated, as the interpretation of the text can be different in the decoding
from that originally intended by the producer or encoder when creating the programme. The
situation comedies by depicting in a humorous vein the realities of affirmative action, adult access
to pornography, the aspirations of the new black elite, feminine participation in the democratic
process, and the rejection of authoritarian censorship from the state or the home indicates the
ideological position of the production teams.
The responses of the focus groups were examined in terms of their own identity as well as where
an historic individuality expands into the collective communities of nations, gender, classes,
generations, race and ethnic groups. Identity was perceived as connected but distinct and
separate, as any event can affect both individuals and society. The thesis explores the proposition that humour as 'cultural reconcilation' can be effective if people are prepared to alter negative patterns of thinking and social practices. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.
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Crise identitaire : Arrested Development et le portrait d’une sitcom dans le paysage télévisuel contemporainMartineau, Julien 07 1900 (has links)
À la fin des années ’90, les modes de consommation et de production qui caractérisent l’industrie télévisuelle subissent une transformation de taille. Parce qu’elle a su s’appuyer sur les nouveaux médias et explorer de nouveaux horizons, l’industrie télévisuelle a complètement changé de visage. Les programmes télévisés – autrefois linéaires et conçus pour un public indifférencié – ont considérablement changé, bouleversant de ce fait même les habitudes des téléspectateurs. L’émergence des nouvelles technologies et la sophistication de la demande ont contraint l’industrie à développer de nouveaux concepts, en misant de plus en plus sur des produits forts singuliers, complexes sur le plan narratif. Les meilleurs sitcoms sont aujourd’hui conçus comme des objets hybrides, influencés tout à la fois par les engouements et les phénomènes populaires, la télé-réalité et le documentaire. C’est le cas de la défunte série Arrested Development, encensée par la critique pour son originalité et son impertinence. L’exubérance histrionique, l’éclatement du récit, l’humour autoréférentiel et l’intertextualité ont fait la réputation de cette série culte, devenue très influente dans le monde des séries télévisées. Ces éléments remarquables – décriés par les premiers commentateurs qui les trouvaient perturbants – montrent que l’avènement de pratiques nouvelles au sein de l’univers télévisuel a radicalement transformé l’expérience du téléspectateur. / At the end of the 1990’s, the television industry experienced drastic changes to consumption and production practices. Through the exploitation of new media and exploration of new horizons, the industry has undergone a complete transformation. The nature of television programs, which were traditionally linear and designed for a general audience, has changed considerably too, deeply affecting the experience of the viewers. With the emergence of new technologies and the sophistication of public demand, the industry has to rely on brand new concepts, henceforth developing unique and complex narratives. Some of the best sitcoms are now designed as hybrid products, influenced by cultural fads, popular phenomena, reality shows and documentaries. Praised by viewers and critics for its unconventional format, the television show Arrested Development is characterized by its histrionic exuberance, non sequitur storytelling, self-referential lines and intertextuality that have become very influential in contemporary television. This television product contains unique features – considered by contemporary commentators as being somewhat disruptive and controversial – which show how the advent of new practices within the television industry has ultimately transformed the viewer’s entire experience. / Pour respecter les droits d'auteur, la version électronique de ce mémoire a été dépouillée de ses documents visuels. La version intégrale du mémoire a été déposée au Service de la gestion des documents et archives de l'Université de Montréal.
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Shakespeare and the genre of comedyDoyle, Anne-Marie January 2006 (has links)
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in antithetical opposition to one another. Setting out from the hypothesis that antitheses are aspects of a deeper unity where one informs the construction of the other’s image this thesis questions the hierarchy of genre through a form of ludic postmodernism that interrogates aesthetics in the same way as comedy interrogates ethics and the law of genre. Tracing the chain of signification as laid out by Derrida between theatre as pharmakon and the thaumaturgical influence of the pharmakeus or dramatist, early modern comedy can be identified as re-enacting Renaissance versions of the rite of the pharmakos, where a scapegoat for the ills attendant upon society is chosen and exorcised. Recognisable pharmakoi are scapegoat figures such as Shakespeare’s Shylock, Malvolio, Falstaff and Parolles but the city comedies of this period also depict prostitutes and the unmarried as necessary comic sacrifices for the reordering of society. Throughout this thesis an attempt has been made to position Shakespeare’s comic drama in the specific historical location of early modern London by not only placing his plays in the company of his contemporaries but by forging a strong theoretical engagement with questions of law in relation to issues of genre. The connection Shakespearean comedy makes with the laws of early modern England is highly visible in The Merchant of Venice, Measure for Measure and The Taming of the Shrew and the laws which they scrutinise are peculiar to the regulation of gendered interaction, namely marital union and the power and authority imposed upon both men and women in patriarchal society. Thus, a pivotal section on marriage is required to pinion the argument that the libidinized economy of the early modern stage perpetuates the principle of an excluded middle, comic u-topia, or Derridean ‘non-place’, where implicit contradictions are made explicit. The conclusion that comic denouements are disappointing in their resolution of seemingly insurmountable dilemmas can therefore be reappraised as the outcome of a dialectical movement, where the possibility of alternatives is presented and assessed. Advancing Hegel’s theory that the whole of history is dialectic comedy can therefore be identified as the way in which a society sees itself, dramatically representing the hopes and fears of an entire community.
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The Mystical Dimension of Michelangelo's WritingsProdan, Sarah Rolfe 24 July 2013 (has links)
This dissertation examines the spiritual poetry of Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) in light of three distinct but related contexts: Italian Evangelism of the Catholic Reformation, the Italian lauda tradition, and Renaissance Augustinianism. After reviewing the reception and critical history of Michelangelo’s poetry, chapter one presents the anthropological approach of the present study as an effective means of illuminating the poet’s spiritual verses by considering what they may have meant – collectively and individually – to the poet himself.
Chapter two analyzes Michelangelo’s lyrics inspired by Vittoria Colonna with respect to the Spirituali of the Ecclesia viterbiensis in general and to the Beneficio di Cristo and personal letters of Vittoria Colonna in particular. It shows that the portrayal of Vittoria Colonna in this poetry as an instrument of grace effecting Michelangelo’s spiritual refashioning, rebirth, and renewal reflects a theology of the Holy Spirit that was dear to the Italian Evangelical community and central to their self-perception.
The third chapter presents the Italian lauda tradition and its mystical verses addressing Christ and the Holy Spirit as an inspiration for Michelangelo who, in a later spiritual sonnet, borrowed directly from one of Lorenzo de’ Medici’s laude. This chapter shows how Michelangelo’s verse is informed by a long, popular Christian tradition in the vernacular.
The discussion in chapter four centres on Dante’s Commedia and on the Augustinian allegoreses that permeate Landino’s Comento to the grand epic. These two works, it is argued, constitute sources as important as Petrarch’s Canzoniere for Michelangelo’s Augustinian vision of a mystico-moral ascent through conversion.
This dissertation concludes that for Michelangelo poetry became an instrument of spiritual devotion. His mystical verses reveal a Catholic intellectual versant in Italian rhetoric of the Catholic Reformation and a poet inspired by Paul, Augustine, and the Italian lauda tradition.
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The Mystical Dimension of Michelangelo's WritingsProdan, Sarah Rolfe 24 July 2013 (has links)
This dissertation examines the spiritual poetry of Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) in light of three distinct but related contexts: Italian Evangelism of the Catholic Reformation, the Italian lauda tradition, and Renaissance Augustinianism. After reviewing the reception and critical history of Michelangelo’s poetry, chapter one presents the anthropological approach of the present study as an effective means of illuminating the poet’s spiritual verses by considering what they may have meant – collectively and individually – to the poet himself.
Chapter two analyzes Michelangelo’s lyrics inspired by Vittoria Colonna with respect to the Spirituali of the Ecclesia viterbiensis in general and to the Beneficio di Cristo and personal letters of Vittoria Colonna in particular. It shows that the portrayal of Vittoria Colonna in this poetry as an instrument of grace effecting Michelangelo’s spiritual refashioning, rebirth, and renewal reflects a theology of the Holy Spirit that was dear to the Italian Evangelical community and central to their self-perception.
The third chapter presents the Italian lauda tradition and its mystical verses addressing Christ and the Holy Spirit as an inspiration for Michelangelo who, in a later spiritual sonnet, borrowed directly from one of Lorenzo de’ Medici’s laude. This chapter shows how Michelangelo’s verse is informed by a long, popular Christian tradition in the vernacular.
The discussion in chapter four centres on Dante’s Commedia and on the Augustinian allegoreses that permeate Landino’s Comento to the grand epic. These two works, it is argued, constitute sources as important as Petrarch’s Canzoniere for Michelangelo’s Augustinian vision of a mystico-moral ascent through conversion.
This dissertation concludes that for Michelangelo poetry became an instrument of spiritual devotion. His mystical verses reveal a Catholic intellectual versant in Italian rhetoric of the Catholic Reformation and a poet inspired by Paul, Augustine, and the Italian lauda tradition.
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L’aspect économique de la rhétorique amoureuse dans la comédie nouvelle et l’élégie érotique romaineRémillard, Anne 04 1900 (has links)
L’identification des contraintes financières et sociales qui sont sous-entendues dans la situation des personnages amoureux de la comédie de Ménandre – à partir de ses pièces et fragments subsistants et de ses adaptations en langue latine par Térence – permet d’éclairer la rhétorique de séduction ou de dissuasion employée par les divers personnages types de ce genre littéraire. Or, il existe un parallèle étroit entre ces discours et situations dramatiques et l’élégie érotique qui fleurit quelques siècles plus tard à Rome sous la plume de Tibulle, Properce et Ovide. Certains aspects déroutants de la rhétorique de séduction employée par les élégistes sont élucidés lorsqu’on les comprend dans le contexte dramatique de la comédie nouvelle : notamment, le poète narrateur se positionne dans la situation du jeune protagoniste amoureux de la comédie et la bien-aimée à qui il s’adresse se trouve dans la situation de la courtisane indépendante qui figure dans plusieurs pièces comiques. Cette recherche conclut qu’il existe une tension financière entre l’amant élégiaque et sa maîtresse qui, bien qu’elle soit passée sous silence par les poètes, influence les arguments utilisés par le narrateur à son égard et les propos imaginés ou rapportés de sa bien-aimée en retour. / The identification of the financial and social constraints that underlie Menander’s love plots helps in explaining the arguments contained in the persuasive and dissuasive discourses employed by the various archetypal characters of this literary genre. This research demonstrates that there is a narrow parallel between the rhetoric rooted in these narrative situations and the later works of the Latin love elegists in a way that elucidates some aspects of the elegiac discourse: the poet-narrator positions himself in the situation of the enamoured young man of new comedy and his beloved addressee’s situation corresponds to that of the independent mistress who appears in many comic plots.
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Eine Operette für Kinder von Johann Adam HillerSchröder, Gesine 17 August 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Die 1778 gedruckte Operette "Die kleine Aehrenleserinn" von Johann Adam Hiller bildete bei einem Instrumentationprojekt an der Hochschule für Musik und Theater "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy" Leipzig die Vorlage. Exemplarisch wird von den bei dem Projekt gemachten praktischen und ästhetischen Erfahrungen berichtet.
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