Gendered Comic Traditions: How Fanny Fern's Satire Subverts Nineteenth-Century Colonial Continuity and Enables Twenty-First Century Neocolonial Hybridity

IF 0.9 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Studies in American Humor Pub Date : 2021-10-01 DOI:10.5325/studamerhumor.7.2.0277
J. Caron
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT:This article offers examples from the antebellum period that bear out Judith Lee's matters of empire framework; it exposes the ways in which American humor both continues and breaks away from its English antecedents, showing in particular how Sara Willis Parton as Fanny Fern does and does not fit into aesthetic and philosophical parameters about satire and satirists that can be traced back to English periodicals. After outlining a colonial continuity through a discussion of Parton and two contemporaries, Lewis Gaylord Clark and William Makepeace Thackeray, I go on to suggest that Parton's Fanny Fern persona also functions as a symbolic origin for a genealogy of women satirists who evoke Hélène Cixous's image of a laughing Medusa, a genealogy I describe as a neocolonial hybrid because it details American women writing satire to mock and resist the domestic imperium of US patriarchy.
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性别化的喜剧传统:范妮·弗恩的讽刺如何颠覆19世纪的殖民连续性并使21世纪的新殖民混合成为可能
摘要:本文以南北战争前的美国为例,论证了朱迪斯·李关于帝国框架的观点;它揭示了美国幽默是如何延续和脱离其英国前身的,特别是展示了莎拉·威利斯·帕顿饰演的范妮·芬是如何符合或不符合关于讽刺和讽刺作家的美学和哲学参数的,这些参数可以追溯到英国期刊。通过对帕顿和他同时代的两位作家刘易斯·盖洛德·克拉克和威廉·梅克皮斯·萨克雷的讨论,勾勒出了一种殖民的延续,我接着提出,帕顿的范妮·弗恩角色也可以作为女性讽刺作家谱系的象征性起源,这些女性讽刺作家让人联想到希克苏斯笔下笑着的美杜莎形象,我把这种谱系描述为新殖民主义的混合体,因为它详细描述了美国女性写讽刺作品来嘲笑和抵制美国父权制的国内统治。
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来源期刊
Studies in American Humor
Studies in American Humor HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
90.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: Welcome to the home of Studies in American Humor, the journal of the American Humor Studies Association. Founded by the American Humor Studies Association in 1974 and published continuously since 1982, StAH specializes in humanistic research on humor in America (loosely defined) because the universal human capacity for humor is always expressed within the specific contexts of time, place, and audience that research methods in the humanities strive to address. Such methods now extend well beyond the literary and film analyses that once formed the core of American humor scholarship to a wide range of critical, biographical, historical, theoretical, archival, ethnographic, and digital studies of humor in performance and public life as well as in print and other media. StAH’s expanded editorial board of specialists marks that growth. On behalf of the editorial board, I invite scholars across the humanities to submit their best work on topics in American humor and join us in advancing knowledge in the field.
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