1. Affect philosophy meets incongruity: about transformative potentials in comic laughter
- Author
-
Mark Weeks
- Subjects
lcsh:Language and Literature ,Cultural Studies ,incongruity ,interruption ,Linguistics and Language ,Affect theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0507 social and economic geography ,Comics ,Affect (psychology) ,Language and Linguistics ,law.invention ,Laughter ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Continental philosophy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,business.industry ,Communication ,humour ,05 social sciences ,Epistemology ,Transformative learning ,affect ,Cultural studies ,CLARITY ,lcsh:P ,laughter ,business ,050703 geography - Abstract
The emergence of philosophical affect theory, sourced substantially in Continental philosophy, has intensified scholarly attention around affective potentials in laughter. However, the relationship between laughter’s affect and the comic remains a complicated one for researchers, with some maintaining that the two should be studied separately (Emmerson 2019, Parvulescu 2010). While there is a credible academic rationale for drawing precise distinctions, the present article takes an integrative approach to laughter and the comic. It analyzes, then synthesizes, points of convergence between key texts in affect philosophy and certain elements of incongruity-based humour theory. Specifically, the article seeks to demonstrate that some integration can bring insight and clarity to discussion of transformative potentials sometimes attributed to forms of comic laughter, especially within cultural studies and social science following the philosophy of Deleuze. This approach may also usefully complicate the concept of incongruity itself.
- Published
- 2020
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