The Uses of Ridicule: Humour, ?Infrapolitics? and Civil Society in Nigeria

The Uses of Ridicule: Humour, ?Infrapolitics? and Civil Society in Nigeria

Author: 
Obadare, Ebenezer
Place: 
New York
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date published: 
2009
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African Affairs
Source: 
African Affairs, Vol. 108 Issue 431, April 2009, PP.197-219
ISSN: 
0001-9909
Abstract: 

As post-military ?democratic? regimes across Africa perpetuate norms and practices that were characteristic of the previous openly authoritarian era, humour and ridicule have emerged as a means through which ordinary people attempt to deconstruct and construct meaning out of a reality that is decidedly surreal. In Nigeria jokes serve a double function as a tool for subordinate classes to deride the state (including its agents) and themselves. Jokes are therefore a means through which an emergent civil society, ?behaving badly?, subverts, deconstructs, and engages with the state. Yet, for all its significance as a form of agency, humour has been neglected in the civil society literature, partly because of the mentality which frames civil society in terms of organizations (humour is not organized), and partly because of its almost exclusive attention to the ?civil? attributes of civil society (humour is, inter alia, rude). This article argues for incorporating humour into the civil society discourse, and suggests that doing so will enrich civil society analysis by focusing on both the constructions of sociality and their associated politics, and the hidden spaces in which most of visible political action originates.

Language: 
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CITATION: Obadare, Ebenezer. The Uses of Ridicule: Humour, ?Infrapolitics? and Civil Society in Nigeria . New York : Oxford University Press (OUP) , 2009. African Affairs, Vol. 108 Issue 431, April 2009, PP.197-219 - Available at: https://library.au.int/fruses-ridicule-humour-infrapolitics-and-civil-society-nigeria-4