Journal article
"First, They're Foreigners": The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and the Limits of Dissident Laughter
Abstract
Much of the humour on The Daily Show is directed at subjects constructed as "foreign." Despite the show's reputation for "subversiveness," such humour relies on demeaning stereotypes. Although the show's parodying of "serious" news seemingly qualifies it as a site of resistance to conventional media strategies, its comedy of the non-American aligns it with orthodox assumptions of American normativity. The situation is complicated by the show's …
Authors
Ross ML; York L
Journal
Canadian Review of American Studies, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 351–370
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication Date
2007
DOI
10.1353/crv.2008.0002
ISSN
0007-7720