Amber Day is Professor of Media and Performance Studies and Chair of the History, Literature, and the Arts Department at Bryant University. She is author of Satire and Dissent: Interventions in Contemporary Political Debate (IUP, 2011) and editor of DIY Utopia: Cultural Imagination and the Remaking of the Possible.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgments 1. Ambivalence: Feminist Comedy Past and Present 2. Ridicule: Leslie Jones and the Growing Visibility of the Alt-Right 3. Loathing: Amy Schumer and White Feminism 4. Revulsion: Samantha Bee, Michelle Wolf, and Twin Comedic Controversies 5. Hope: Hannah Gadsby and the Expansion of Comedy's Borders 6. Conclusion: Female Comedians and the Cultural Imaginary Notes Works Cited Index
"In this most necessary book, Amber Day demolishes the myth that women can't be funny. But more importantly, she helps us understand why too many people struggle to make sense of funny women, and why the debate around female comedy matters so much in our complicated cultural times."-Geoffrey Baym, author of From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News "Day dives into the heart of contemporary cultural ruptures with clarity and nuance, demonstrating how women's stand-up comedy serves as a lightning rod for broader public debates, influencing collective values, shaping identities, and navigating ethical boundaries in public life. Essential reading for scholars, practitioners, and comedy fans alike, this book deepens our understanding of humor's political and affective complexities and capacities and convincingly argues that comedy-especially when women are the provocateurs-can provoke, persuade, and sometimes perilously divide."-Beck Krefting, author of All Joking Aside: American Humor and Its Discontents

