Stand-up comedy and the performance of race and identity in Trevor Noah’s It Makes No Sense and Learning Accents

IF 0.2 0 THEATER South African Theatre Journal Pub Date : 2022-05-04 DOI:10.1080/10137548.2022.2136743
Tekena Gasper Mark
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Abstract

Stand-up comedy has thrived as a popular form of entertainment in Africa, and it has been used as a tool to question the postcolonial relationship between the West and the Other, which promotes racialized assumptions. Similarly, African stand-up comedians like Trevor Noah, a migrant from South Africa to the United States, who was born in South Africa to a Swiss father and a South African mother, have become global entertainment icons and demonstrate how migrants can use humour to confront prejudice and institutional racism. Drawing from Noah’s mixed racial backgrounds, this study examines how Noah’s identity shapes his artistry using two of his performances It Makes No Sense (2020) and Learning Accents (2021). The study engaged the Superiority, Relief and Incongruity theories of comedy, and observed that intersectional identities and marginalization are the main themes explored in the two comic acts, and Noah presents humour as a site of resistance used to subvert assumptions of stable racial and identity categories that promote the marginalization of Blacks and people of colour.
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在特雷弗·诺亚的《毫无意义》和《学习口音》中,单口喜剧和种族和身份的表演
单口喜剧作为一种流行的娱乐形式在非洲蓬勃发展,它被用作质疑后殖民时期西方与他者之间关系的工具,这种关系助长了种族化的假设。同样,特雷弗·诺亚(Trevor Noah)这样的非洲单口喜剧演员已经成为全球娱乐偶像,他们展示了移民如何用幽默来对抗偏见和制度性种族主义。特雷弗·诺亚是一名从南非移民到美国的移民,他的父亲是瑞瑞人,母亲是南非人。从诺亚的混合种族背景出发,本研究通过他的两部表演《毫无意义》(2020)和《学习口音》(2021)来研究诺亚的身份如何塑造他的艺术。该研究运用了喜剧的优越感、解脱感和不协调感理论,并观察到交叉身份和边缘化是两个喜剧行为中探讨的主题,诺亚将幽默作为一种抵抗的场所,用来颠覆稳定的种族和身份类别,这些类别促进了黑人和有色人种的边缘化。
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发文量
7
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