Winner of the 2008 Katherine Singer Kovacs Book Award Prior to the civil rights movement, comedians performed for audiences that were clearly delineated by race. Black comedians performed for black audiences and white comedians performed for whites. Yet during the past forty-five years, black comics have become progressively more central to mainstream culture. In Laughing Mad , Bambi Haggins looks at how this transition occurred in a variety of media and shows how this integration has paved the way for black comedians and their audiences to affect each other. Historically, African American performers have been able to use comedy as a pedagogic tool, interjecting astute observations about race relations while the audience is laughing. And yet, Haggins makes the convincing argument that the potential of African American comedy remains fundamentally unfulfilled as the performance of blackness continues to be made culturally digestible for mass consumption. Rather than presenting biographies of individual performers, Haggins focuses on the ways in which the comic persona is constructed and changes across media, from stand-up, to the small screen, to film. She examines the comic televisual and cinematic personae of Dick Gregory, Bill Cosby, Flip Wilson, and Richard Pryor and considers how these figures set the stage for black comedy in the next four decades. She reads Eddie Murphy and Chris Rock as emblematic of the first and second waves of post-civil rights era African American comedy, and she looks at the socio-cultural politics of Whoopi Goldberg's comic persona through the lens of gender and crossover. Laughing Mad also explores how the comedy of Dave Chappelle speaks to and for the post-soul generation. A rigorous analytic analysis, this book interrogates notions of identity, within both the African American community and mainstream popular culture. Written in engaging and accessible prose, it is also a book that will travel from the seminar room, to the barbershop, to the kitchen table, allowing readers to experience the sketches, stand-up, and film comedies with all the laughter they deserve.
Similarly, she reveals how the iconoclastic literary works of Ishmael Reed and Suzan-Lori Parks use satire, hyperbole, and burlesque humor to represent a violent history and to take on issues of racial injustice.
... Laughing Mad (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2007), 203. 4. Haggins, Laughing Mad, 214. 5. Dave Chappelle, interview by Oprah Winfrey, The Oprah Winfrey Show, February 3, 2006. 6. Segment “When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong ...
... laughing mad , " " insanely hilarious , " as well as ingrained comic archetypes such as the " screwball , " " nut ... laughter . FIGURE 6.4 Women laugh hysterically at the patriarchal Dutch judicial.
It was a better Christmas than any of them had expected, especially Mad Dog, even in hiswildest dreams. On Boxing Day, heawoke tofind thatthe smattering of flakes he'd seen on the hills the day they'd arrivedhad turned into a fullblown ...
Grier, William H., and Price M. Cobbs. Black Rage. New York: Basic Books, ... Pearson Education Limited, 2009. Hanchard, Michael. ... Harris, Keith M. “ 'That Nigger's Crazy': Richard Pryor, Racial Performativity, Cultural Critique.
... mad improv” is, incidentally, quite different from what humor scholar Bambi Haggins (2007) calls “laughing mad” in a book with the same title, Laughing Mad: The Black Comic Persona in Post- Soul America. Haggins's notion of “laughing ...
This book assembles 13 essays that examine motifs common in Chappelle's comedy, including technology and digital culture; race, gender, and ethnicity; economics and politics; music, television, film, and performance; and memory, language, ...
William F. Fry, in this work, presents a new theory of the structure of humor based on the sometimes little understood psychological processes experienced by those who use humor or are exposed to humor.
... Laughter, Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. Gray, Frances (2009) 'Privacy, Embarrassment and Social Power ... Laughing Mad: The Black Comic Persona in Post-Soul America, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Halas ...
... Laughing Mad, 20. 25. This background on Gregory's early career and research process relies on Gregory and Lipsyte, Nigger, 121–28, and Gregory and Moses, Callus on My Soul, 31–32. 26. Gregory and Lipsyte, Nigger, 147–48. 27. Ibid., 148 ...