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Stephen E. Kercher
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- INTRODUCTION. Liberal Satire in Postwar America 1
- PART ONE. THE POSITIVE USES OF HUMOR 13
- CHAPTER ONE. Bill Mauldin and the Politics of Postwar American Satire 15
- CHAPTER TWO. “We Shall Meet the Enemy”: Herbert Block, Robert Osborn, Walt Kelly, and Liberal Cartoonists’ “Weapon of Wit” 33
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PART TWO. THE CLEANSING LASH OF LAUGHTER
- CHAPTER THREE. Comic Revenge: Parodic Revelry and “Sick” Humor in the 1950s Satiric Underground 77
- CHAPTER FOUR. “Truth Grinning in a Solemn, Canting World”: Liberal Satire’s Masculine, “Sociologically Oriented and Psychically Adjusted” Critique 119
- CHAPTER FIVE. Spontaneous Irony: The Second City, the Premise, and Early Sixties Satiric Cabaret and Revue 161
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PART THREE. THE POLITICS OF LAUGHTER
- CHAPTER SIX. “We Hope You Like Us, Jack”: Liberal Political Satire, 1958–63 193
- CHAPTER SEVEN. “Are There Any Groups Here I Haven’t Offended Yet?”: Liberal Satire Takes a Stand 239
- CHAPTER EIGHT. “Well-Aimed Ridicule”: Satirizing American Race Relations 269
- CHAPTER NINE. Mocking Dr. Strangelove; or, How American Satirists Flayed the Cold War, the Bomb, and American Foreign Policy in Southeast Asia 299
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PART FOUR. THE LIMITS OF IRREVERENCE
- CHAPTER TEN. “Sophisticated Daring” and Political Cowardice: Television Satire and NBC’s That Was the Week That Was 345
- CHAPTER ELEVEN. Satire That Would “Gag a Goat”: Crossing the Line with Paul Krassner and Lenny Bruce 389
- Conclusion: Liberal Satire’s Last Laughs 425
- Notes 447
- Bibliography 543
- Index 555
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- INTRODUCTION. Liberal Satire in Postwar America 1
- PART ONE. THE POSITIVE USES OF HUMOR 13
- CHAPTER ONE. Bill Mauldin and the Politics of Postwar American Satire 15
- CHAPTER TWO. “We Shall Meet the Enemy”: Herbert Block, Robert Osborn, Walt Kelly, and Liberal Cartoonists’ “Weapon of Wit” 33
-
PART TWO. THE CLEANSING LASH OF LAUGHTER
- CHAPTER THREE. Comic Revenge: Parodic Revelry and “Sick” Humor in the 1950s Satiric Underground 77
- CHAPTER FOUR. “Truth Grinning in a Solemn, Canting World”: Liberal Satire’s Masculine, “Sociologically Oriented and Psychically Adjusted” Critique 119
- CHAPTER FIVE. Spontaneous Irony: The Second City, the Premise, and Early Sixties Satiric Cabaret and Revue 161
-
PART THREE. THE POLITICS OF LAUGHTER
- CHAPTER SIX. “We Hope You Like Us, Jack”: Liberal Political Satire, 1958–63 193
- CHAPTER SEVEN. “Are There Any Groups Here I Haven’t Offended Yet?”: Liberal Satire Takes a Stand 239
- CHAPTER EIGHT. “Well-Aimed Ridicule”: Satirizing American Race Relations 269
- CHAPTER NINE. Mocking Dr. Strangelove; or, How American Satirists Flayed the Cold War, the Bomb, and American Foreign Policy in Southeast Asia 299
-
PART FOUR. THE LIMITS OF IRREVERENCE
- CHAPTER TEN. “Sophisticated Daring” and Political Cowardice: Television Satire and NBC’s That Was the Week That Was 345
- CHAPTER ELEVEN. Satire That Would “Gag a Goat”: Crossing the Line with Paul Krassner and Lenny Bruce 389
- Conclusion: Liberal Satire’s Last Laughs 425
- Notes 447
- Bibliography 543
- Index 555