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About this book
"An important and timely expansion of American racial discourse. Tucker’s demonstration of how the comic is not (just) funny and how rage is not (just) destructive is a welcome reminder that willful injustice merits irreverent scorn. "āDerek C. Maus, coeditor of Post-Soul Satire: Black Identity after Civil Rights
"Adroitly explores how comic rage is a skillfully crafted, multifaceted critique of white supremacy and a soaring articulation of African American humanity and possibility. Sparkling and highly readable scholarship."āKeith Gilyard, author of John Oliver Killens: A Life of Black Literary Activism
A combustible mix of fury and radicalism, pathos and pain, wit and loveāTerrence Tucker calls it "comic rage," and he shows how it has been used by African American artists to aggressively critique America’s racial divide.
In Furiously Funny, Tucker finds that comic rage developed from black oral tradition and first shows up in literature by George Schuyler and Ralph Ellison shortly after World War II. He examines its role in novels and plays, following the growth of the expression into comics and stand-up comedy and film, where Richard Pryor, Spike Lee, Whoopi Goldberg, and Chris Rock have all used the technique.
Their work, Tucker argues, shares a comic vision that centralizes the African American experience and realigns racial discourse through an unequivocal frustration at white perceptions of blackness. They perpetuate images of black culture that run the risk of confirming stereotypes as a means to ridicule whites for allowing those destructive depictions to reinforce racist hierarchies. At the center of comic rage, then, is a full-throated embrace of African American folk life and cultural traditions that have emerged in defiance of white hegemony’s attempts to devalue, exploit, or distort those traditions. The simultaneous expression of comedy and militancy enables artists to reject the mainstream perspective by confronting white audiences with America’s legacy of racial oppression.
Tucker shows how this important art form continues to expand in new ways in the twenty-first century and how it acts as a form of resistance where audiences can engage in subjects that are otherwise taboo.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Joke to the Eye
- 1. (Re)Viewing Ellisonās Invisible Man: Comedy, Rage, and Cultural Tradition in an African American Classic
- 2. Dick Gregory, Moms Mabley, and Redd Foxx: Bridging the Gap between Comedy, Rage, and Race
- 3. From Absence to Flight: The Appearance of Comic Rage in the Black Arts and Black Power Movements, 1966ā1976
- 4. Fury in the āPromised Landā: Comic Rage in George C. Wolfeās The Colored Museum and Paul Beattyās The White Boy Shuffle
- 5. Hollywood Shuffle and Bamboozled: Comic Rage, Black Film, and Popular Culture at the End of the Century
- 6. Direct from a Never Scared Bicentennial Nigger: Comic Rage in the Work of Richard Pryor, Whoopi Goldberg, and Chris Rock
- Conclusion: On Being Pissed Off to the Highest Degree of Pissivity
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index