Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Rubberbandits’ Guide to Satire: Absurdism and Social Commentary in a Cross-Media Environment

View through CrossRef
This paper argues that through an engagement with cross-media hybridity, Irish comedy duo The Rubberbandits have established a dynamic cross-media forum that aims to restore the Irish public’s capacity for critical social and political engagement. Central to this process is The Rubberbandits’ ability to use their absurdist satire as a foundational tool that can serve as the basis of this cultural forum, while also facilitating the negotiation of social and political issues across a variety of media. Given that this cultural forum exists across different media, platforms, and formats, this paper sets out to analyse the various ways in which the duo have adapted their satirical style to suit the demands of these different media forms, and what implications this process of adaption has had on their work. Beginning with an analysis of the social and critical functions of satirical comedy more broadly, this paper will then focus on the specific brand of satirical social commentary employed by The Rubberbandits, paying particular attention to the role of absurdity in their critical engagement with prominent issues facing Irish society. As this paper will demonstrate, by embracing the hybridity of the cross-media environment, all the while maintaining their absurdist satirical style, The Rubberbandits have established a dynamic and carnivalesque cross-media forum that aims to restore the Irish public’s capacity for critical social and political engagement.
Title: The Rubberbandits’ Guide to Satire: Absurdism and Social Commentary in a Cross-Media Environment
Description:
This paper argues that through an engagement with cross-media hybridity, Irish comedy duo The Rubberbandits have established a dynamic cross-media forum that aims to restore the Irish public’s capacity for critical social and political engagement.
Central to this process is The Rubberbandits’ ability to use their absurdist satire as a foundational tool that can serve as the basis of this cultural forum, while also facilitating the negotiation of social and political issues across a variety of media.
Given that this cultural forum exists across different media, platforms, and formats, this paper sets out to analyse the various ways in which the duo have adapted their satirical style to suit the demands of these different media forms, and what implications this process of adaption has had on their work.
Beginning with an analysis of the social and critical functions of satirical comedy more broadly, this paper will then focus on the specific brand of satirical social commentary employed by The Rubberbandits, paying particular attention to the role of absurdity in their critical engagement with prominent issues facing Irish society.
As this paper will demonstrate, by embracing the hybridity of the cross-media environment, all the while maintaining their absurdist satirical style, The Rubberbandits have established a dynamic and carnivalesque cross-media forum that aims to restore the Irish public’s capacity for critical social and political engagement.

Related Results

Judgments, Corrections, and Audiences: Amy Schumer's Strategies for Narrowcast Satire
Judgments, Corrections, and Audiences: Amy Schumer's Strategies for Narrowcast Satire
ABSTRACT Narrowcast methods—first cable, then the internet—have enabled entertainers to target media to highly specific audiences. This poses an existential problem ...
Radical Media Archaeology (its epistemology, aesthetics and case studies)
Radical Media Archaeology (its epistemology, aesthetics and case studies)
Media Archaeology is both a method and an aesthetics of approaching technical objects. Within a broad range of such academic and artistic practices, radical media archaeology will ...
The History of the Rechabites— an Initial Commentary
The History of the Rechabites— an Initial Commentary
AbstractThis article is the third in a series of studies on The History of the Rechabites. The first, "The Story of Zosimus or The History of the Rechabites?,"1 established the ind...
Narrative traces through being and places, drawing, performance drawing and painting
Narrative traces through being and places, drawing, performance drawing and painting
A reflective observation of a 40-year drawing practice (from the 1970s to the present day), from observational drawing in outdoor environments, to performing Driftsong sound drawin...
Cocreating guide dog partnerships: dog training and interdependence in 1930s America
Cocreating guide dog partnerships: dog training and interdependence in 1930s America
This article scrutinises issues around disability and dependent (interdependent) agency, extending these to non-human animals and service dogs, with a sustained reference to the tr...
Changes of approach to urban context in international guidelines and experiences in Lithuanian urban environment
Changes of approach to urban context in international guidelines and experiences in Lithuanian urban environment
The focus of the research is the concept of context, guidelines for the approach to it, and the ways by which it was regarded in the development of urban environment. The paper def...
Marvels of the system. Art, perception and engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete
Marvels of the system. Art, perception and engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete
This paper discusses the relationship between art, perception and human engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete through the depiction of landscapes and the ‘natural world’ ...
Genre in media production
Genre in media production
How do we explain changes in media genres? Are they the result of economic, technological or other kinds of structural forces; or are they the result of the change-producing agency...

Back to Top