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OverviewUsing Lacanian psychoanalysis, as well as its pre-history and afterlives, In the Event of Laughter argues for a new framework for discussing laughter. Responding to a tradition of ‘comedy studies’ that has been interested only in the causes of laughter (in why we laugh), it proposes a different relationship between laughter and causality. Ultimately it argues that laughter is both cause and effect, troubling chronological time and asking for a more nuanced way of conceiving the relationship between subjects and their laughter than existing theories have accounted for. Making this visible via psychoanalytic ideas of retroactivity, Alfie Bown explores how laughter – far from being a mere response to a stimulus – changes the relationship between the present, the past and the future. Bown investigates this hypothesis in relation to a range of comic texts from the ‘history of laughter,’ discussing Chaucer, Shakespeare, Kafka and Chaplin, as well as lesser-known but vital figures from the comic genre. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Prof. Alfie Bown (Independent Scholar, UK)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic USA Weight: 0.345kg ISBN: 9781501342622ISBN 10: 1501342622 Pages: 168 Publication Date: 15 November 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of Figures Preface and Acknowledgments Note on the Text Introduction: Laughter's Doubleness 1. Laughter as Liberation 2. Laughter and Control 3. Laughter as Event 4. Laughter and Anxiety Conclusion Bibliography IndexReviewsI read In the Event of Laughter with real pleasure. It is smart and confident, but also ruminative and genuinely philosophical, and balances a distinct central thesis with many diverse case studies. The notion that there is something penny-pinching and parsimonious about existing accounts of 'the event' ('a rare and unusual occurrence, something that occasionally interrupts the trajectory of things'), and that rather, wouldn't we be better off thinking about how it happens all the time?, is a very sympathetic one; and it's an inspired twist to locate it in the act of laughter. The book will certainly have readers in the growing area of comedy and laughter studies, as it is a combative (though courteous) shakeup of that field. * James Smith, Lecturer in English Literature, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, and author of Samuel Richardson and the Theory of Tragedy: Clarissa's Caesuras (2016) * I read In the Event of Laughter with real pleasure. It is smart and confident, but also ruminative and genuinely philosophical, and balances a distinct central thesis with many diverse case studies. The notion that there is something penny-pinching and parsimonious about existing accounts of 'the event' ('a rare and unusual occurrence, something that occasionally interrupts the trajectory of things'), and that rather, wouldn't we be better off thinking about how it happens all the time?, is a very sympathetic one; and it's an inspired twist to locate it in the act of laughter. The book will certainly have readers in the growing area of comedy and laughter studies, as it is a combative (though courteous) shakeup of that field. * James Smith, Lecturer in English Literature, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, and author of Samuel Richardson and the Theory of Tragedy: Clarissa's Caesuras (2016) * Alfie Brown's In the Event of Laughter is above all about taking laughter seriously, recognizing in it a force that erects and constructs ideologies and subjectivities, as well as calling these very things into question. A wonderful book, providing a fresh and pleasantly surprising conceptual framework for the discussion of laughter. * Alenka Zupancic, Professor of Philosophy and Psychoanalysis at The European Graduate School, Switzerland, Research Advisor at the Institute for Philosophy, Slovene Academy of Sciences, Slovenia, and author of The Odd One In: On Comedy * Author InformationAlfie Bown is author of The Playstation Dreamworld (2017) and Enjoying It: Candy Crush and Capitalism (2015). He is editor of Everyday Analysis and writes for The Guardian and The Paris Review, among other publications. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |