A semiotics of comedy
Auteurs : Keisalo, Marianna (Auteur)
Éditeur : HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
Date de publication : 2016
Langue : Anglais
Description : HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory Vol 6, No 2 (2016) , p.101-121
Notes : Bibliogr. : p.117-120
Sujets :
Sémiotique et arts du cirque
Humour
Chapayekas
Peuples autochtones - Rites et cérémonies
Histoire des arts du cirque - Mexique
Art clownesque - Philosophie et théorie
Résumé :
This article develops an analytic approach to comedic performance by examining the performance of the Chapayeka ritual clowns as a series of semiotic shifts and reversals: the Chapayekas play with images and contexts, introducing unpredictable figures to effectively shift the grounding conditions of their own performance. The Chapayeka performance combines both conventional and set forms as well as improvised and newly invented ones. As they shift from convention to invention (in the sense of Roy Wagner), the Chapayekas emerge as “symbols that stand for themselves.” This capacity allows the Chapayekas to function as both symbolic figures in the ritual and self-contained contextual grounds, which enables them to produce further signs and manipulate figure-ground relations within and beyond the ritual. The analytic view developed here is informed by the complex and multilayered semiotics of comedic performance; this exploration offers a novel perspective on how comedic performances create and wield semiotic force through establishing grounds and evoking figure-ground relations.
Localisation : Études, rapports et articles de périodiques
Cote : 791.330 973 K277s 2016