ABSTRACT

Jokes have always been part of African culture, but never have they been so blended with the strains and gains of the contemporary African world as today. Joke-Performance in Africa describes and analyses the diverse aesthetics, forms, and media of jokes and their performance and shows how African jokes embody the anxieties of the time and space in which they are enacted.

The book considers the pervasive phenomenon of jokes and their performance across Africa in such forms as local jests, street jokes, cartoons, mchongoano, ewhe-eje, stand-up comedy, internet sex jokes, and ‘comicast’ transmitted via modern technology media such as the TV, CDs, DVDs, the internet platforms of YouTube, Facebook, and other social arenas, as well as live performances. Countries represented are Egypt, Kenya, Malawi, Morocco, Nigeria, and Zambia, covering the North, West, East and Southern Africa. The book explores the description of the joke form from various perspectives, ranging from critical discourse analysis, interviews, humour theories, psychoanalysis, the postcolony and technauriture, to the interactive dramaturgy of joke-performances, irrespective of media and modes of performance.

Containing insightful contributions from leading African scholars, the book acquaints readers with detailed descriptions of the diverse aesthetics of contemporary African jokes, thereby contributing to the current understanding of joke-performance in Africa. It will appeal to students and scholars of African studies, popular culture, theatre, performance studies and literary studies.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part I|54 pages

Joking about the government

chapter 3|9 pages

Joking about the government

A close reading of the Moroccan comic show The School of the Naughty

part II|61 pages

Traditional forms and (post)modern contexts

part III|47 pages

Street jokes

chapter 8|22 pages

(Con)text and performance of Mchongoano

An urban youth joke genre in Kenya

chapter 9|24 pages

Street joke-performance in Egypt

Halah and Outa Hamra

part IV|64 pages

Gender and sex

chapter 10|24 pages

The aesthetics of the ugly

Perspectives on degrading online sex jokes in Kenya

chapter 11|20 pages

Dorika’s metamorphosis

The allusive potency of a comic character

chapter |19 pages

From “the beautiful” to “the bold”

A linguistic analysis of some of Doaa Farouk’s humorous texts 1

part V|47 pages

Stand-up comedy

chapter 13|24 pages

Severity in hilarity

Appraising the satirical value of stand-up comedy in Nigeria