Dis-placing Laughter in 30 Rock

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Abstract

The significance of 30 Rock’s TV comedy for gendered laughter can only be evaluated fully if historical and theoretical perspectives are combined: Between Liz Lemon and her Boss Jack Donaghy a socially pre-modern comedy of carnivalesque reversal and familiarization clashes with a type of ambiguity that results from the different systems within modern society as described by Niklas Luhmann. While the corporate man’s sense of humour is tied to institutional hierarchies the funny female character may have become an institution – as head
writer and star comedienne –, but her metafictional ironies are used to risk and secure follow-up in a way that shows awareness both of the change in social organization and the established status of women in comedy today. Even if the conditions of being subversive are not the same as in earlier waves of feminism and modernity, 30 Rock’s arrangement of comic modes owes its sophistication not simply to media intertextuality, the history and gender politics of comic communication turn out to be more structurally revealing.

Details

Original languageGerman
Article number12
Pages (from-to)69
Number of pages80
Journal Gender forum : an internet platform for gender and women's studies
Issue number35
Publication statusPublished - 2011
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Keywords

  • Gender