{"id":14134,"date":"2020-11-29T14:17:28","date_gmt":"2020-11-29T19:17:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/?p=14134"},"modified":"2020-11-29T14:20:01","modified_gmt":"2020-11-29T19:20:01","slug":"alenka-zupancic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2020\/11\/29\/alenka-zupancic\/","title":{"rendered":"Zupan\u010di\u010d Stand Up For Comedy"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>This paper was written for the conference <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/fallsemester.org\/2020-1\/2020\/4\/26\/alenka-zupani-stand-up-for-comedy\" target=\"_blank\">\u201cBeyond the Joke: Psychoanalysis and Comedy\u201d<\/a>, which took place at Freud Museum, London, in May 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We live in times when comedy\u2014and especially comedy with an edge\u2014is often threatened from the right and from the left. Maybe even more so from the left: as Angela Nagle has pointed out, we\u2019ve been witnessing lately a curious turn in which the new populist right is taking the side of transgression and rebellion, traditionally associated with the left: they talk about breaking the taboos (of speech, but also of conduct), they dare to speak up, say the forbidden things, challenge the established structures (including the media) and denounce the \u201celites\u201d. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<!--more-->\n\n\n\n<p>Even when in power, they continue with this \u201cdissident\u201d rhetoric of opposition and of courageous transgression (for example against European institutions, or against the \u201cdeep State\u201d). This general turn from simple conservativism to transgression on the right also has its comedic moments. For example, even the disregard for the most benign social norms of civility can be sold off as a courageous Transgression. I insult someone, and then I claim I\u2019m defending the freedom of speech. Transgression seems to be \u201csexy\u201d, even if it simply means no longer greeting your neighbour, because, \u201cWho invented these stupid rules and why should I obey them?\u201d <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In this constellation and after giving up on the more radical ideas of social justice, the left has paradoxically ended up on the conservative side: defending the rule of law, conserving what we have, and responding to contradictions, excesses, and even catastrophes generated by the present socio-economic system (crises, imminent ecological collapse, wars, huge economic differences, corruption, the rise of neo-fascist ideas) by means of introducing more and more new rules, regulations, and adjustments that are supposed to keep that \u201canomalies\u201d at bay. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This growing\u2014and the often impenetrable corpus of rules and sub-rules, which are usually easily disregarded by the big players, but tend to drastically complicate lives of smaller players and individuals\u2014includes \u201ccultural\u201d rules and injunctions that have become in the past decades, the main battlefield between the \u201cleft\u201d and the \u201cright\u201d, particularly in the US<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>When the question of obeying and supporting or not the rules of political correctness (and identity politics) becomes the <em>principal<\/em> and exclusive field of social struggle, something has gone very wrong. <\/strong>Or very right, that is certainly much to the right. The right has won not simply because more and more people subscribe to its ideas, but because of how the very thing that makes the difference (between right and left) has shifted and became thoroughly redefined as a cultural war.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Important social movements (such as #MeToo) are often channelled exclusively into the logic of \u201cjoining the club\u201d (of the victims) and <strong>demanding that the Other (different social institutions and preventive measures) protect us against the villainy of power,<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">instead of aiming at empowering ourselves and becoming active agents of social struggle and change<\/span><\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Valorisation of affectivity and feelings appears at the precise point when some problem\u2014injustice, to say\u2014would demand a more radical systemic revision as to its causes and perpetuation.<\/strong> Social valorisation of affects basically means that we pay the plaintiff with her own money: Oh, but your feelings are so precious, you are so precious! The more you feel, the more precious you are. This is a typical neoliberal manoeuvre, which transforms even our traumatic experiences into possible social capital. If we can capitalize on our affects, we will limit our protests to declarations of these affects\u2014to say, declarations of suffering and hurt. I\u2019m of course not saying that suffering should not be expressed and talked about, but that this should not \u201cfreeze\u201d the subject in the figure of the victim.<strong> The revolt should be precisely about refusing to be a victim, rejecting that position on all possible levels.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-group\"><div class=\"wp-block-group__inner-container is-layout-flow wp-block-group-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>It is rather obvious that this turn to feelings, affects, sensibility, and their consideration\/protection (as opposed to being equipped to fight, retort, and deal with things) is a very unfriendly environment for comedy (and jokes). <strong>In times when we need trigger warnings to be able to read certain passages in Shakespeare without getting hurt, comedy has very little space to breathe.<\/strong>&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I knew a girl once who became rather obsessed with the idea of avoiding all possible bad, unhealthy food, and with establishing a perfect harmony within her body. At some point, she was telling me how close she has come to achieving that goal. As proof, she told me that if she eats as much like a small piece of chocolate, she throws up. Her body has found perfect harmony and is now able to detect and immediately reject the slightest foreign or bad element.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&nbsp;And we can ask, with Nietzsche, what the \u201cgreat health\u201d is all about? Is it about being able to digest and <em>deal with<\/em> some amount of \u201cbad\u201d food and other \u201cforeign\u201d elements, or is it about collapsing and violently throwing up at the slightest sight of something \u201cbad\u201d or \u201cforeign\u201d?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Comedy clearly sides with the first option and is indeed an interesting phenomenon in this respect: it demands great feeling and sensibility when it comes to scanning the social structures and detecting its paradoxes, contradictions, and neuralgic points, but it also demands some degree of bluntness and insensitivity when presenting these points in its own specific (comic) way.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>Also, some degree of blasphemy and of a possible offence, of \u201ccrossing the line\u201d, are almost constitutive elements of comedy (and of jokes). Not simply because <strong>comedy favors transgression, but because it essentially <em>works with<\/em> what is on the other side: with impulses and ideas that we tend to have, but won\u2019t allow ourselves to express them, or simply don\u2019t (want to) think about.<\/strong> And we could say that from the civic and civilized point of view it is often <em>good<\/em> that we don\u2019t allow ourselves to express these impulses. But what is, or would be, also <em>good<\/em> from the civic point of view, is that we didn\u2019t simply <em>repress<\/em> them, but confront them and deal with them in by means other than repression. What is presently going on in this respect is gigantic repression, accompanied by the necessary return of the repressed. (And comedy is a social form that allows for other ways of dealing with it.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Then there is another form of resistance which is more interesting because I resist the content itself: it is the content, and not just its expression, that I find disturbing or inadmissible. Here we are usually dealing with the configuration where something like <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><em>repression<\/em> (in the strict Freudian sense of <em>Verdr\u00e4ngung<\/em>) <\/span><\/strong>concerning a specific content of our desire has taken place. Here the configuration changes, it is no longer that of \u201cI would like to say it, but cultural norms, considerations of respect, politeness, etc. prevent me from doing so\u201d. No, I would<em> not<\/em> like to say it or hear it, for that matter. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When repression (of a certain content-specific impulse) takes place, this does not imply that I secretly very much want to do it, just wouldn\u2019t admit to it; it rather means that I\u2019m profoundly repulsed by it (I have very strong <em>feelings<\/em> about the matter, or against the matter). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is an old saying according to which all the most zealous, fervent, fanatical anti-gay people are \u201crepressed homosexuals\u201d. This is probably true in some cases at least, yet it does not mean that they are secretly gay, but just wouldn\u2019t publicly admit it. No, they genuinely hate this impulse in themselves, which is why they tend to react so violently when they perceive it in others. This is not simply about duplicity (public\/private), it is about the fact that <strong>our most authentic feelings can already involve some form of repression <\/strong>which manifests itself precisely in our immediate, spontaneous feelings.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet, as Freud has also insisted, morality based on repression comes with a price. This price can be seen and felt in symptoms or, more generally, in what he termed <em>das Unbehagen in der Kultur (Discontent in civilization)<\/em>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The more we progress in our civilized ways, and the more morally sophisticated we become, the more we experience the weight of this discontent. This Freudian stance was and still is, sometimes perceived as implying that liberation would come with the abandonment of all morality; or as implying that we should <em>return<\/em> to some simpler and more spontaneous stage of social interaction. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Yet Freud\u2019s point was different, and Lacan picked it up in a form of the explicit, simple, yet difficult question: <strong><em>Could there be a morality, or ethics, not based on and fed by repression<\/em>? <\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>And if the answer is yes, what would these ethics be, how would it function? As clinical practice psychoanalysis is supposed to go a long way in lifting or dismantling the mechanism of repression. Do we become immoral as a result of it? Yes and no. It is certainly not that we become without restrains in respect to our impulses and defy others by simply following them. We deal with them by means other than repression (for example sublimation). And we <em>do<\/em> need to deal with them, because these impulses are (and remain) contradictory and conflictual already <em>in themselves<\/em>, and not simply in view of or because of the cultural and social norms inhibiting them. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, it is not by \u2018lifting\u2019 or abandoning our cultural regulation that we could expect the malaise, the discontent to simply disappear and life becomes harmonic. <strong>Culture <em>is<\/em> a solution to the inherent contradictions of impulses, but it is also a solution that produces new contradictions and new levels of problems. And it does not exist simply in the opposition to impulses, but in complicity with them<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now if we look from this perspective at our current social and political landscape, what do we see? The main-stream left (the so-called \u201ccultural\u201d or \u201cliberal\u201d left) mostly insists that discontent in Kultur can only be managed by more Kultur, by a denser and denser network of rules and regulations, and that any problem that occurs can be solved or dealt with by means of coming up with another (even more specific) rule. (This leads, among other things, to the exclusion of all manifestations of enjoyment and desire from the social space, because <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">enjoyment and desire as such already involve a transgression, an invasion into the space of the other.)<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The \u201cpopulist\u201d right, on the other hand, operates by means of performing a cut between two kinds of laws\/rules: between, on the one hand, what they claim to be eternal, natural (or divine) laws\u2014such as embodied for example in our \u201cChristian tradition\u201d, national identity, \u201cnatural sexuality\u201d, and, on the other and, the mere (multi-)\u201dcultural\u201d laws which are all \u201cartificial\u201d and inhibit our freedom and natural spontaneity. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, the right exempts some laws as sacred and diverts all the popular rebellion and discontent produced by maintaining the repression that also these laws are based on, towards the other laws, which it deems \u201ccultural\u201d. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This explains the stunning surplus investment which is clearly there for the right when it comes to attacking certain rules of political correctness. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I\u2019m the first to say that political correctness is a rather insufficient and actually \u201cpolitically incorrect\u201d strategy, because it avoids the source of the problem, and replaces the task of dealing with it with more additional rules. But the surplus investment with which the right receives some of these rules clearly indicates that there is much more going on here \u2013 a genuine Freudian <em>Verschiebung,<\/em> displacement.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What both these strategies have in common is that they completely ignore or avoid precisely the difficult, vexing question of repression; they don\u2019t want to know anything about what we can all \u201csystemic causes\u201d of the trouble. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The centrist \u201cleft\u201d is busy attending to the symptoms, using the signals and expression of the discontent. <strong>The strategy of the right, however, is proving to be much more efficient, because\u2014to put it very simply\u2014it allows people to show discontent, and to rebel at certain regions, without diminishing the levels of repression,<\/strong> and its cost, involved in the sustaining of the \u201cfundamental\u201d laws that define its world-view and its world-economy. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Moreover, by increasing the number and complexity of rules and sub-rules the liberal left tends to increase the levels of repression, <em><strong>Verdr\u00e4ngung<\/strong><\/em>, and<strong> the right directly profits from this increase, channelling the outlet of pressure <\/strong>in the direction that suits it in concrete circumstances. This is true both on \u201cpersonal\u201d and \u201csocial\u201d levels, which are deeply connected anyway.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is here, in this configuration, that the political importance of comedy today comes in, even when its content has nothing to do with politics. Obviously, this is not to say that comedy can replace politics. The claim is simply that<strong> comedy is a cultural form that can work on repression, do something to and with it, and that this is also where it political dimension lies. <\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cComedy\u201d is obviously a very general term. Things that we list under comedy (all things that make us laugh) can have very different political effects, including very reactionary ones. But the fact is that <strong>comedy does have at its disposal techniques which, combined with thinking and the right talent, can make us deal with these impulses by means other than repression, and in this way make them useless as unconscious food or fuel of our actions<\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Comedy can lure us out of our well consolidated (moral) chair, expose us to considerations and ideas that we would normally tend to resist. It lures us out of this comfort not by means of awakening enlightenment, but by means of a (different kind of) <em><strong>pleasure<\/strong><\/em>. (Freud compared this Vorlust to the effects of intoxication, alcohol). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We could also say that it invites us to think by way making us discover thinking as possibly pleasurable, as a joy. Nietzsche made the expression \u201cgay science\u201d largely know and popular with the title of one of his books (<em>die Fr\u00f6hliche Wissenschaft<\/em>), but the term originates in the Provencal troubadour poetic tradition (gai saber). Lacan writes on this tradition extensively in the context of \u201csublimation\u201d (defined already by Freud as<strong><em> \u201csatisfaction of the drives without repression\u201d<\/em><\/strong>), and invokes a possible emancipatory potential of \u201cgay science\u201d. I think good comedy is something very much like <em><strong>gay science<\/strong><\/em>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s been argued\u2014by myself among others\u2014that comedy can have both reactionary and emancipatory effects, it can both disarm the power and consolidate it, empower the people or just entertain and divert them. This double way of comedy has little to do with the comedian\u2019s a priori political choice and preferences (the latter rather follow from a certain way of understanding and doing comedy). In the last part of my talk, I would like to propose a few points to help us navigate in the often muddy area of this distinction, with the help of what I\u2019ve said so far.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As the terms that could name this difference, I propose \u201cstand up comedy\u201d and \u201csit back comedy\u201d. Both terms are meant as metaphors, and not as referring to postures in which one does the comedy (standing up or sitting down), nor \u2013 in the case of \u201cstand up\u201d \u2013 simply referring to the style of performing known as stand-up. The main difference between them consists of what they do, or not, to and with the individual and social repressions that feed any current \u201cstate of affairs\u201d. <strong>Do they tackle them, shift them, dismantle them, or mostly just use and perpetuate them?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cSit back comedy\u201d typically cashes in on our repressions, further consolidates us in our beliefs and, more importantly, in our righteousness, our (moral or intellectual) superiority. It can involve strong elements of irony understood as drawing, and playing upon, the line between ourselves (who get it and are on the right side), and others (who don\u2019t get it). James Harvey made this point very nicely:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cWhere a successful joke connects you to an audience, an irony may do just the opposite. Mostly, an audience \u2018gets\u2019 a joke or else it falls flat, as we say. But an irony \u2026 may only confirm itself, may begin to seem richer than it did even at first if half the audience misses it.\u201d[3]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This may be half of the audience present, but it may also refer to the others \u201cout there\u201d who don\u2019t (or wouldn\u2019t) get it; yet this place of \u201cthe (stupider) other(s)\u201d is structurally built into irony, and into the gliding differentiation it implies.<br>I\u2019m not simply identifying \u201csit back comedy\u201d with irony, only suggesting that it often contains this particular element of irony.<strong> If you side with irony, you can never be on the wrong side, it\u2019s always the others, the \u201cna\u00efve believers\u201d, the \u201cfools\u201d who are wrong.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For example, I would qualify much of what Stephen Colbert does on The Late Show in relation to Trump as \u201csit back comedy\u201d (even when he is standing up doing it): you fill the audience with democratic voters, and then you make fun of Trump, week after week after week, with more or less funny jokes. There is no risk taken there; you play against the background of general consensus (which you take care to never disturb), laughing at the stupidity of other(s). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The effect of this is, even if progressive in content, largely conservative. <strong>We get to \u201cenjoy our Trump\u201d<\/strong>, as well as enjoy not being Trump, being on the right side of the divide, being right. (I guess this could be a very good definition of the mainstream left today: <strong>it is all about being right<\/strong>, with all the ambiguity that this way of putting it can have in English. So I\u2019m tempted to ask: Why not be wrong for a change?) A few minutes of ridiculing Trump per day seem to be enough to fulfill our political agenda or duty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is no real (comic) questioning hear about what makes Trump possible and sustains him, on the contrary; he is presented as the main and only problem. Without him, America would become great again, to borrow his own slogan.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What I call \u201cstand up comedy\u201d does not overlap with stand up as performance category, but it does contain some of its elements. To begin with: you don\u2019t perform in a controlled environment or address your act to those who already think exactly like you, share your views and convictions. Clearly, you prepare well for your act, but you do not simply perform, play out your script. You do it, in part, by responding to the response of the audience, and not necessarily by simply playing into its hands. By this I mean: say your joke is making a point which doesn\u2019t go down too well with the public. I imagine you then have a choice between abandoning that point and moving on to something else, or rising the stakes, insisting and finding a yet funnier way of saying it, which convinces the public to take the point in and consider it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Convincing the audience, \u201cwinning it over\u201d (also there where it isn\u2019t already \u201cyours\u201d), attempting to leave no one out, is a very important element of \u201cstand-up comedy\u201d, which involves both taking some risk and engaging in the art of convincing. But above all, the crucial element of what I call \u201cstand up comedy\u201d is that it makes the audience stand up (in their head), walk around, and dwell in spaces outside their consolidated area and well-established divides. And even enjoy this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Let me conclude with an example, which is interesting for my purposes because it includes both \u201cstand up\u201d and \u201csit back\u201d comedy, and it actually uses the \u201ccultural sit-back\u201d comedy to bring in the stand-up, and with it the question of systemic causes (of repression).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What I have in mind is one of the more famous episodes of Sacha Baron Cohen\u2019s Who is America, called \u2018Building a Mosque in Kingman Arizona\u2019. Cohen (in one of his characters) addresses the assembly of local people in Kingman Arizona. He first asks them if they want to see \u201chuge economic growth\u201d in town, coming from an investment of 385 million dollars. Everybody says yes. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Then he tells them what the investment is about \u2013 their town has been chosen as the location for building a \u201cbrand new, state of the art mosque\u201d \u2013 not just any mosque, but the world\u2019s largest mosque outside of the Middle east. People\u2019s enthusiasm quickly dies out, they start protesting and uttering all kinds of objections. From very reasonable ones (Why would they need a mosque like this?) to various islamophobic versions of objections (mosque equals terrorism). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At first sight, the episode may look simply like Cohen\u2019s (successful) attempt at provoking a display of collective islamophobia in a small town in Arizona. But I don\u2019t think this \u201cliberal\u201d agenda (we feel good laughing at prejudiced locals) exhausts the interest of this episode. I think the quite predictable \u201cislamophobia\u201d is actually being used here as means of exposing (or at least pointing to) a much more general, subtle and mischievous form of liberal blackmail. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-embed-youtube wp-block-embed is-type-video is-provider-youtube wp-embed-aspect-16-9 wp-has-aspect-ratio\"><div class=\"wp-block-embed__wrapper\">\n<iframe loading=\"lazy\" title=\"Who Is America | Building a Mosque in Kingman Arizona | Sacha Baron Cohen\" width=\"840\" height=\"473\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/KHJlZyFxp88?feature=oembed\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe>\n<\/div><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>The way Cohen presents this project is coined upon a classical \u201cliberal\u201d manipulation: if you want people to accept something, say A, you introduce A as a given background in which they have the choice between different versions of A. You don\u2019t ask: \u201cDo you want A or not?\u201d You ask: \u201cDo you want a green A, or a blue A, or some other version of it perhaps? Whatever you want, you\u2019re free to choose.\u201d And the moment they start considering different choices, people are hooked, they\u2019ve already accepted A.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So, in his speech, Cohen starts by telling the local people that they \u201cwill have the choice between two different designs\u201d of the mosque, design 1 and design 2, which he shows them on slides. Then he asks, \u201cSo who here supports design one?\u201d Nobody, they all protest, and he immediately concludes: \u201cSo, you are all for design 2.\u201d People are outraged, they don\u2019t want either one, they say. Cohen continues with his corporate salesman strategy: \u201cLet me ask you something. You don\u2019t like this construction: so tell me about your dream mosque.\u201d In other terms: just keep thinking about the alternatives within the choice that I\u2019m imposing on you. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At that point, one of the locals cuts the debate by energetically crying out: <strong>\u201cThere IS no dream mosque!\u201d<\/strong> We should think twice before simply dismissing this response for its \u2018islamophobic\u2019 prejudice, and rather take it as a model of what should be our principled response to any of this kind of \u201cfree choice\u201d blackmail situations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, perhaps we should complicate a bit the causality with which we usually \u201cexplain\u201d these things, and say: <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">the man is not saying this because he is islamophobic, he turned \u201cIslamophobic\u201d (or homophobic, or\u2026.whatever-phobic) because subjected to this kind of subtle, invisible blackmail and its consequences for decades.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The accumulating yet impotent frustration generated by this seemingly neutral liberal framework of choices is being canalized, in contemporary populist politics\u2014which fully supports the economical side of this blackmail\u2014against designed groups of enemies (Muslims, immigrant workers\u2026), precisely so as not to be directed against its systemic causes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>The episode of \u201cWho is America\u201d is quite ingenious because it manages to expose, at the same time, both islamophobic prejudice and the liberal capitalist framework with its blackmail. It uses one to expose the other, and vice versa.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-list\"><li>Sigmund Freud, \u2018The Ego and the Id\u2019,&nbsp;<em>The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud<\/em>, ed. James Stachey, Hoharth Press, London 1953-1974, vol. 19, p.52.&nbsp;<\/li><li>Shift from external authority to the constitution of the Superego (conscience): in the case of simply external authority one renounces one\u2019s satisfactions (of the drives) to avoid punishment. \u2018If one has carried out this renunciation, one is, as it were, quits with the authority and no sense of guilt should remain. But with fear of the superego the case is different. Here, instinctual renunciation is not enough, for the wish persists and cannot be concealed from the superego. Thus, in spite of the renunciation that has been made, a sense of guilt comes about. (\u2026) instinctual renunciation now no longer has a completely liberating effect; virtuous conscience is no longer rewarded with the assurance of love. A threatened external unhappiness \u2013 loss of love and punishment of the part of external authority \u2013 has been exchanged for a permanent internal unhappiness, for the tension of the sense of guilt.\u201d S. Freud,&nbsp;<em>SE<\/em>&nbsp;21, p. 127-128.<\/li><li>&nbsp;James&nbsp;Harvey:&nbsp;<em>Romantic Comedy in Hollywood. From Lubitsch to Sturges,<\/em>&nbsp;New York: Da capo Press 1998<em>,&nbsp;<\/em>p. 672.<\/li><\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This paper was written for the conference \u201cBeyond the Joke: Psychoanalysis and Comedy\u201d, which took place at Freud Museum, London, in May 2019. We live in times when comedy\u2014and especially comedy with an edge\u2014is often threatened from the right and from the left. Maybe even more so from the left: as Angela Nagle has pointed &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2020\/11\/29\/alenka-zupancic\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Zupan\u010di\u010d Stand Up For Comedy&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[83,111,21,48],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-14134","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-agency","category-desire","category-jouissance","category-unconscious"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14134","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=14134"}],"version-history":[{"count":13,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14134\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":14476,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14134\/revisions\/14476"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=14134"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=14134"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=14134"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}