1st Edition

News Parody and Political Satire Across the Globe

Edited By Geoffrey Baym, Jeffrey Jones Copyright 2013
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    In recent years, the US fake news program The Daily Show with Jon Stewart has become a surprisingly important source of information, conversation, and commentary about public affairs. Perhaps more surprisingly, so-called 'fake news' is now a truly global phenomenon, with various forms of news parody and political satire programming appearing throughout the world.

    This collection of innovative chapters takes a close and critical look at global news parody from a wide range of countries including the USA and the UK, Italy and France, Hungary and Romania, Israel and Palestine, Iran and India, Australia, Germany, and Denmark. Traversing a range of national cultures, political systems, and programming forms, News Parody and Political Satire Across the Globe offers insight into the central and perhaps controversial role that news parody has come to play in the world, and explores the multiple forces that enable and constrain its performance. It will help readers to better understand the intersections of journalism, politics, and comedy as they take shape across the globe in a variety of political and media systems.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of the journal Popular Communication.

    1. News Parody in Global Perspective: Politics, Power, and Resistance Geoffrey Baym and Jeffrey P. Jones

    2. "Find Out Exactly What to Think—Next!": Chris Morris, Brass Eye, and Journalistic Authority Graham Meikle

    3. From the "Little Aussie Bleeder" to Newstopia: (Really) Fake News in Australia Stephen Harrington

    4. No Strings Attached? Les Guignols de l’info and French Television Waddick Doyle

    5. The Comical Inquisition: Striscia la Notizia and the Politics of Fake News on Italian Television Gabriele Cosentino

    6. Localizing The Daily Show: The heute show in Germany Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw and Guido Keel

    7. Transgressing Boundaries as the Hybrid Global: Parody and Postcoloniality on Indian Television Sangeet Kumar

    8. Satire in the Holy Wonderland: The Comic Framing of Arab Leaders in Israel Limor Shifman

    9. Out of Control: Palestinian News Satire and Government Power in the Age of Social Media Matt Sienkiewicz

    10. The Geopolitics of Parazit, the Iranian Televisual Sphere, and the Global Infrastructure of Political Humor Mehdi Semati

    11. The Witty Seven: Late Socialist-Capitalist Satire in Hungary Anikó Imre

    12. "The Tattlers’ Tattle": Fake News, Linguistic National Intimacy, and New Media in Romania Alice Bardan

    13. Political Satire in Danish Television: Reinventing a Tradition Hanne Bruun

    14. Live From New York, It’s the Fake News! Saturday Night Live and the (Non)Politics of Parody Amber Day and Ethan Thompson

    Biography

    Geoffrey Baym is Associate Professor of Media Studies at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, USA. He is the author of From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News (2010) and numerous articles and book chapters on the changing nature of news media and political discourse.

    Jeffrey P. Jones is Director of the Institute of Humanities at Old Dominion University, USA. The author of Entertaining Politics: Satiric Television and Political Engagement, 2nd edition (2010), he is also co-editor of Satire TV: Politics and Comedy in the Post-Network Era (2009) and The Essential HBO Reader (2008).

    'In addition to its transnational focus, the collection is also commendable for not suffering from the theory-ridden dryness that accompanies much scholarship on comedy and for sustaining a high quality of scholarship throughout.' Perin Gürel, Journal of American Studies of Turkey