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American Laughter, American Fury

Humor and the Making of a White Man's Democracy, 1750–1850

Eran A. Zelnik

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How humor helped white men cast the United States as a nation in which only they were entitled to citizenship.

A joke is never just a joke—not even in the eighteenth century. In American Laughter, American Fury, Eran A. Zelnik offers a cultural history of early America that shows how humor among white men served to define and construct not only whiteness and masculinity but also American political culture and democracy more generally.

Zelnik traces the emerging bonds of affinity that white male settlers in North America cultivated through their shared, transformative experience of mirth. This...

How humor helped white men cast the United States as a nation in which only they were entitled to citizenship.

A joke is never just a joke—not even in the eighteenth century. In American Laughter, American Fury, Eran A. Zelnik offers a cultural history of early America that shows how humor among white men served to define and construct not only whiteness and masculinity but also American political culture and democracy more generally.

Zelnik traces the emerging bonds of affinity that white male settlers in North America cultivated through their shared, transformative experience of mirth. This humor—a category that includes not only jokes but also play, riot, revelry, and mimicry—shaped the democratic and anti-elitist sensibilities of Americans. It also defined the borders of who could participate in politics, notably excluding those who were not white men. While this anti-authoritarian humor transformed the early United States into a country that abhorred elitism and class hierarchies, ultimately the story is one of democratization gone awry: this same humor allowed white men to draw the borders of the new nation exclusively around themselves.

Zelnik analyzes several distinct forms of humor to make his case: tall tales, "Indian play," Black dialect, riot and revelry, revolutionary protests, and blackface minstrelsy. This provocative study seeks to understand the vexing, contradictory interplay among humor, democracy, and violence at the heart of American history and culture that continues today.

Reviews

Reviews

Carefully argued and usefully understated, this deeply intelligent study of the development and early history of the United States shows humor to have been central in gluing together a new nation. That nation made riot, revolution, and raucous cultural production into festival and fun with the most and least oppressed men within the dominant race coming to share laughs, increasingly at the expense of the victims of nation building.

Zelnik's brave and hard-hitting analysis of racist visual and textual denigrations of Black people and Native Americans takes stock of the white nationalist politics of early American humor. Treading carefully through one hundred years of cruel, mocking, and mimetic almanacs, pamphlets, and song lyrics, he exposes and dissects the offensive laugh track of white supremacy.

Zelnik has renovated an important strand of scholarship on both American humor and on the origins and development of a national and nationalist popular culture. His book will satisfy historians of the United States as well as be usefully in dialogue with cultural studies scholarship and work on settler colonialisms of various times and places.

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Book Details

Release Date
Publication Date
Status
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Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
352
ISBN
9781421450605
Illustration Description
21 b&w illus.
Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: Yankees and Gentlemen
1. The Joyous Multitude: Humor and the Premodern Crowd in the Revolutionary Era
2. The Witty Few: Augustan Humor and the Politics of Exclusion
Part II: From

Introduction
Part I: Yankees and Gentlemen
1. The Joyous Multitude: Humor and the Premodern Crowd in the Revolutionary Era
2. The Witty Few: Augustan Humor and the Politics of Exclusion
Part II: From Backcountry to Frontier
3. Laughter in the Wilderness: Transgression and Mirth in Rural America
4. The Laughter and the Fury: Terror and Masquerade on the American Frontier
5. Alligator-Horses: The Frontier Jester and the Origins of Manifest Destiny
Part III: A Tale of Two Clowns
6. A Black Clown for a White Nation: The Origins and Context of Blackface Minstrelsy
7. American Foils: Black and White Jesters in Antebellum Popular Culture
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

Author Bio
Featured Contributor

Eran A. Zelnik

Eran A. Zelnik is a lecturer in the Department of History at California State University, Chico.