
God's Fools
Laughing Saints, Delirious Prophets, and the Sacred Makers of Comedy
- Publisher's listprice GBP 25.00
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12 652 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher Applause
- Date of Publication 18 May 2025
- Number of Volumes Hardback
- ISBN 9781493080595
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages256 pages
- Size 228x152 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 20 BW Photos 700
Categories
Short description:
God's Fools: Laughing Saints, Delirious Prophets, and the Sacred Makers of Comedy is an illuminating look at the stand-up comedian as a modern heir to saints and mystics.
MoreLong description:
From the self-abasements of Charlie Chaplin and Lenny Bruce?s provocations to the present-day culture warring over figures like Dave Chappelle and Hannah Gadsby, comedians have always been not simply entertainers, but charismatic observers of (and participants in) social anxieties and pathologies. Performers as varied as Mort Sahl, Richard Pryor, Margaret Cho, and Louis CK have courted both devotion and outrage at various points in their careers, as they cavort at the outer extremities of taboo, good taste, and received opinion.
In God?s Fools:Laughing Saints, Delirious Prophets, and the Sacred Makers of Comedy religion and literature scholar Jason Crawford gives a penetrating and surprising look at the social role that comedians play by placing them in their proper historical lineage?one that begins not with vaudeville and minstrelry but with the mystics, martyrs, and misfits of the premodern Judeo-Christian world. In Crawford?s expansive account, comedians like Chaplin and Chappelle mingle with such motley historical figures as St. Francis of Assisi, the first-century rabbi Akiba, and the Shakespearean collaborator Robert Armin. In lively and memorable character sketches, Crawford reveals the compelling through-lines that connect these figures to modern comedians, showing how, they attract devotion as exemplars of bad behavior?of a shabbiness transfigured by mystical insight?and act as lightning rods for rejection and punishment during times of deep cultural division.
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