The Animal That Laughs at Itself: False False Alarms about the End of 'Man'
A trio of themes recur across prominent Western theories of laughter: violence, the human/nonhuman, and error. The paper traces this trio through a series of frequently cited paradigms for understanding laughter, including superiority, incongruity and relief theories, Henri Bergson’s theory of laughter and V. S. Ramachandran’s false alarm theory; and argues that it reflects a shared, if partially submerged concern with the instability and demise of a particular figure of the human, one that is circumscribed by the culturally specific (if globally influential) values of Eurocentric/Western thought, largely corresponding to Sylvia Wynter’s ‘Man’. This suggests that laughter has an ambiguous immanent potential for both undermining and/or reasserting, de- and/or restabilising the illusion of Man’s universalizing drive to identify itself with the human per se.
| Item Type | Book Section |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Laughter; Anthropology; Violence; Error; Humour; Laughter in motion pictures; Laughter in literature; Posthumanism; Henri Bergson |
| Departments, Centres and Research Units |
Centre for Cultural Studies (1998-2017) Media and Communications |
| Date Deposited | 08 Nov 2022 16:43 |
| Last Modified | 08 Nov 2022 16:50 |
