RIS ID

97981

Publication Details

Sorensen, M. (2015). Radical clowning: challenging militarism through play and otherness. Humor: international journal of humor research, 28 (1), 25-47.

Abstract

During the last decade, radical clowning has become an increasingly popular tactic among participants in the global justice movement in the western world. In order to discuss how radical clowns differ from conventional clowns and what they have in common, radical clowning can be interpreted through the lenses of clown theory and the four concepts of play, otherness, incompetence, and ridicule. Ethnographic data from the Swedish anti-militarist network Ofog reveals how play and otherness contribute to radical clowns’ attempts to communicate nonviolent values, negotiate space, and recognize the human in the other. The findings demonstrate one way that humor can be rebellious and challenge established relations of power.

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/humor-2014-0146