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Humanities, Volume 10, Issue 4

December 2021 - 24 articles

Cover Story: “Cringe and Sympathy: The Comedy of Mental Illness in Flowers” brings together findings from humor studies—especially work on cringe comedy—and disability studies. The Channel 4 series, which aired in two seasons in 2016 and 2018, respectively, unites two recent developments in comedy: it relies frequently on elements of cringe and it addresses issues of mental health and neurodiversity. The series employs cringe to question societal norms of the “proper person” in connection to mental illness, but also broadens the genre of cringe so that, at times, it becomes a cringe tragedy rather than a cringe comedy, thus taking seriously the pain of mental illness. Additionally, Flowers self-reflexively employs elements of narrativity to draw attention to the cultural constructedness and storyfication of mental illness throughout history. View this paper.
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Articles (24)

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
3,468 Views
12 Pages

10 November 2021

This paper examines the ambiguous relationship between the literary uses of language in Merleau-Ponty’s own work and his ontology. It is argued that Merleau-Ponty’s critique of phenomenology—that is, his critique of an already critical philosophy—lea...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3,424 Views
11 Pages

10 November 2021

This paper analyzes the conceptualization of ideas of race in three historical novels in the fictional work of Jurji Zaydan (1861–1914), a Syrian Christian intellectual who wrote on the Golden Ages of Islamic History through serialized, popular works...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
25,131 Views
23 Pages

2 November 2021

From the late thirteenth through late seventeenth centuries, a single three-word Latin phrase—sapiens dominabitur astris, or “the wise man will be master of the stars”—proliferated in astrological, theological, philosophical, and literary texts. It b...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
9,115 Views
10 Pages

29 October 2021

The animated series BoJack Horseman has garnered much critical acclaim for its mix of tragic and comic portrayals of its eponymous protagonist, washed-up actor and cynic BoJack, and his friends in the anthropomorphic Hollywoo setting. The term “sadco...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
4,561 Views
8 Pages

26 October 2021

This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experiences through which it puts its audiences’ bodies, and it uses this as a point of departure to think about the genre’s cultural work. Based on the observa...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5,457 Views
13 Pages

20 October 2021

In this paper, we consider the major and controversial lexicon of Deleuze’s ‘becoming-woman’ and what an alternative re-working of this concept might look like through the story of Mary Poppins. In playfully exploring the many interesting aspects of...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
6,004 Views
11 Pages

8 October 2021

In response to this special issue’s question of whether mainstream science fiction has become stuck in presentism and apocalypticism, this article examines how utopia is expressed and salvaged in the work of Rivers Solomon. Using three of Solomon’s n...

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Humanities - ISSN 2076-0787Creative Common CC BY license