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Comedies of Nihilism

The Representation of Tragedy Onscreen

by Amir Khan

Type
Essays
Subject
GenreComedy/Humor
Keywords
comedy, theory, ending
Publishing date
2018
Publisher
Palgrave MacMillan
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 194 pages
6 x 8 ¼ inches (15 x 21 cm)
ISBN
978-3-319-59893-2
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Book Presentation:
This book presents close-readings of seven post-millennial comedic films: Up in the Air, Tropic Thunder, JCVD, Winnebago Man, The Trotsky, Be Kind Rewind, and Hamlet 2. It is a sequel to Stanley Cavell’s 1981 landmark study of the comedic genre, Pursuits of Happiness, where he examines seven comedies of Hollywood’s “Golden Age.” Khan puts forward the idea that comedies, once centred on the conventional “happy ending,” are no longer interested in detailing the steps to any ending we might call happy. Instead, the agenda of most culturally serious comedies today is to “spoof,” to make all that is fair foul. The seven films presented here risk a type of cultural nihilism―spoofing for the sake of spoofing and nothing else, indicative not of film’s promise but its failure.

By equating the failure of film with the failed national politics of Canada (or the failed politics of nationalism andcommunity more generally), this study shows that comedy has less to do with happiness and more to do with the grotesque. The films analysed represent hyper-realized forms of comic irony and move towards what theatre knows as tragedy, or a tragic vision.

About the Author:
Amir Khan is Associate Professor of English in the Foreign Studies College at Hunan Normal University in Changsha, Hunan, PRC. His books include Comedies of Nihilism (2017) and Shakespeare in Hindsight (2016). He is managing editor of Conversations: The Journal of Cavellian Studies.

Press Reviews:
"Amir Khan’s eloquent voice and discerning mind take his reader on an exhilarating and provocative journey through seven post-9/11 films. Following the sage guidance of Stanley Cavell, Khan invites us to engage in clear-eyed and instructive discussions about film and moral reasoning, which thoughtful moviegoers will gratefully enjoy. Khan’s book will generously reward contemporary American efforts to accurately descry the True North, and it will provide fresh insight into American self-understanding as Canada’s imperial movie-making neighbor to the south." (Lawrence F. Rhu, Professor Emeritus of English Language and Literature at the University of South Carolina, USA)

"A beautifully written book that is both insightful and necessary. It offers a set of attentive readings of contemporary popular comedies articulated as philosophical as well as cultural film criticism. It also proposes a new theoretical genre and rediscovers the critic’s vital task of thinking through present-day tragic nihilism by engaging with and reflecting on the popular art of this time." (Sérgio Dias Branco, Professor of Film Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal)

"Amir Khan’s important book explores whether film comedy’s potential for social and political regeneration still holds in a world of shifting transnational alliances. Through attentive analysis of a number of films, Comedies of Nihilism considers the viability of national cinematic cultures in a period of globalisation, and asks what we still have a right to expect film to do for us." (Andrew Taylor, Senior Lecturer in English Literature, University of Edinburgh, UK)

"Comedies of Nihilism is an inventive, unusual combination of communications’ theory, film criticism, literary studies, and cultural-philosophical speculation. It raises well-known ideas about the Canadian marginal position―on the edge of the American empire―and gives these new vistas, perspectives that are interdisciplinary,or, truly inter-art. Crossing genres, fusing approaches, speculating, citing, alluding, its style is at times reminiscent of Marshall McLuhan himself." (B.W. Powe, author, poet, York University, Canada)

See the publisher website: Palgrave MacMillan

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