A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Inappropriate Laughter: Affective Homophily and the Unlikely Comedy of #MeToo




AuthorsSundén Jenny, Paasonen Susanna

Publication year2019

JournalSocial Media + Society

Volume5

Issue4

Number of pages10

ISSN2056-3051

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119883425

Web address https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/2056305119883425

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/42914093


Abstract

This article investigates the affective and ambiguous dynamics of feminist humor as an unexpected strategy of resistance in connection with #MeToo, asking what laughter may do to the sharpness of negative affect of shame and anger driving the movement. Our inquiry comes in three vignettes. First, we deploy Nanette—Hannah Gadsby’s 2018 Netflix success heralded as the comedy of the #MeToo era—arguing that the uniform viral warmth surrounding the show drives the emergence of networked feminisms through “affective homophily,” or a love of feeling the same. With Nanette, the contagious qualities of laughter are tamed by a networked logic of homophily, allowing for intensity while resisting dissent. Our second vignette zooms in on a less known feminist comedian, Lauren Maul, and her online #MeToo musical comedy riffing off on apologies made by male celebrities accused of sexual harassment, rendering the apologies and the men performing them objects of ridicule. Our third example opens up the door to the ambivalence of irony. In considering the unexpected pockets of humor within the #MeToo scandal that ripped apart the prestigious institution of the Swedish Academy, we explore the emergence of carnivalesque comedy and feminist uses of irony in the appropriation of the pussy-bow blouse as an ambiguous feminist symbol. Our examples allow us to argue for the political importance of affective ambiguity, difference, and dissent in contemporary social media feminisms, and to highlight the risk when a movement like #MeToo closes ranks around homogeneous feelings of not only shame and rage, but also love.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 18:26