1st Edition

Religious Satire in the Era of New Atheism Do You ‘Seriously Believe That’ After 9/11

By Jerry C. Jaffe Copyright 2025
90 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

90 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

90 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Religious Satire in the Era of New Atheism presents a contemporary account of religious satire as evidenced by the modern art of stand-up comedy. Focused on the context of the post-9/11 American culture phenomenon, sometimes referred to as the New Atheism – as embodied by public intellectuals such as Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, and Richard Dawkins – it documents the rise of comedic... Read more

1. Introduction: "I Survive Trauma Through My Sense of Humour"  2. Reading Between the Lines and Defining Satire: "Seeming Seeming"  3. Religious Satire and Doubting Thomases: "I'm Here Promoting — Doubt"  4. Acting Out the Character of God: "Ridiculing the Incarnation"  5. Comedians Satirizing Creationists: "I Needed to Go to This Tabernacle of Ignorance"  6. Conclusion: "People Snapped"

Biography

Jerry C. Jaffe is Professor of Theater at Lake Erie College. He has directed or performed in over 100 shows. Before coming to Lake Erie College, Jerry lived and worked in Japan and New Zealand, teaching, acting, and directing there. Many of his articles on the theater have been published in various academic journals, including “ ‘I needed to go to this tabernacle of ignorance’: Marc Maron’s critique of the Creation Museum” (Bulletin for the Study of Religion, Vol. 42, No. 3 (2013)); and he co-edited the 2008 book Performing Japan: Contemporary Expressions of Cultural Identity. Recent productions he has directed include The Memo, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Crave, Murder by Poe, Sexual Perversity in Chicago, The Jungle Book, Proof, and Almost, Maine. He also performs stand-up comedy professionally, in venues around the country.

“Jerry Jaffe's a passionate expert on comedy in this deep-dive of how the craft has evolved post-9/11.  From how comedians addressed the tragedy to the role of wit in fighting religious fundamentalism, he writes fearlessly about fearless writers.   His literary, comedic & pop cultural reference points are mind-bending in this wide-ranging analysis on the tragically misunderstood art of satire.” 

John FugelsangSirusXM

“Jerry Jaffe’s Religious Satire in the Era of New Atheism is an accessible and entertaining look at the ways comedians grappled with religion in the wake of September 11th.  Jaffe’s primary focus is an elucidation of the rhetorical devices that humorists use to lampoon religious fundamentalism.  Along the way, though, Jaffe also sheds light on the contours of the many debates about religion in the 21st Century.  The book is recommended for anyone with an interest in contemporary satire or religion.”

David Gillota, author of Dead Funny: The Humor of American Horror

“Jerry C. Jaffe’s new monograph offers an original, scholarly  focus  on  stand-up  comedy  by  prominent  names,  including  Ricky  Gervais,  Marc Maron, Bill Maher, and others, reflecting on their dialogue with the ideas of prominent public intellectuals  and  authors who  embodied  the  New  Atheist  movement,  including  Christopher Hitchens, Richad Dawkins, and Sam Harris. These are all very suitable figures for this topic, and his book makes an important contribution by capturing this popular movement, unifying the intellectual  and  the  comic […].

The book is also strong scholarship  throughout,  spanning  a  broad  range  of  sources  which  elevates  the  field  of contemporary Comedy Studies. A continual fluidity between ‘old’ and ‘new’ [sources] is provocative through its proximity and makes for an engaging read […].

It is also a great strength of this book that Jaffe takes a highly cerebral and neutral approach in  confronting  what  could  easily  be  the  highly  polarising  issues  of  religion  and  politics  in America –offering  education,  information,  and  reflection,  through a  mixture  of  theoretical approaches and intertwined case studies […].  

I  would  recommend  this  book  to  researchers,  teachers  or  students  who  are  interested  in performance technique and the cultural function of religious satire during this important moment in American history. By capturing the historical conflation of stand-up,television comedy, and New  Atheist  intellectualism, Religious  Satire  in  the  Era  of  New  Atheism provides  a  useful reference point for future studies.”

Alex Symons, The European Journal of Humour Research