ABSTRACT

Since 2016 there has been an outpouring of humour, comedy and satire on the United Kingdom’s EU Referendum and decision to leave the EU, or Brexit. This book examines the relationship between Brexit and its comedy, exploring how Brexit and comedy are connected in both Leave and Remain discourse.

It argues that both populism and comedy are rhetorical in nature and so are linked through their semantic structure and communicative potential. Considering the incongruities that Brexit presents for British society, the author analyses the populism that has emerged from those incongruities in the form of ironic, ambiguous and dichotomous discourse. Through the analysis of a range of comedy on the EU Referendum and Brexit, including material from stand-up and situation comedy, and political satire of various types, The Rhetoric of Brexit Humour examines the way in which comedy acts as a rhetoric that draws on, supports and attacks the discourses of Brexit. This provides not just an advance in our understanding of political satire but also a clearer description of the nature of populism.

This book will appeal to sociologists, political scientists, media and communications scholars, and anyone interested in Brexit, populism and comedy.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Brexit, comedy and populism

chapter 1|27 pages

Leave or remain?

Unpacking the dichotomies of the EU Referendum and Brexit populism

chapter 2|22 pages

Brexit, irony and populist politics

chapter 5|20 pages

Brexit, social class and comedy

chapter 6|21 pages

‘Brexit means breakfast’

The language of Brexit and comedy

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

Politics and satire in post-referendum Britain