This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s and derived from a theatre history in which conventions of Naturalism were modified by emergent British writers working with European avant-garde motifs. The article makes the case by analysing the importance of cringe to the BBC sitcom Steptoe and Son, tracing its form and themes back to the ‘comedy of menace’ and ‘Theatre of the Absurd’ emblematised by the early work of playwright Harold Pinter. The article links the play that made Pinter’s reputation, The Birthday Party, to dramatic tropes and social commentary identified in Steptoe and Son and in other British sitcoms with cringe elements. The analysis not only discusses relationships betw...
PhDThere are three parts to this thesis, which explores how politicians, the public and broadcasters...
The aim of this work is to analyse how the comic effect is constructed from a series ofstereotypes t...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
In Harold Pinter's last completed project before his death, a screen adaptation of Anthony Shaffer's...
First used by the theatre critic Irving Wardle in a 1958 article, the expression comedy of menace ha...
This introduction to the Special Issue on cringe humour briefly traces the starting point of the con...
This article aims to approach the phenomenon of cringe in four steps: First, from a sociological per...
Cringe comedies differ from traditional embarrassment humour by being explicitly aimed at evoking no...
The purpose of this dissertation is to explore the effects that television satire has had upon the B...
Considering Pinter’s early revue sketches as integral elements of his early writing project, this ar...
Sharing a Laugh examines the social and cultural roles of television situation comedy in Britain bet...
2019 sees the 50th anniversary of the iconic British television comedy series Monty Python’sFlying C...
Harold Pinter, the Nobel laureate, is a literary giant of modern drama in English. His plays are cat...
AbstractCharacters in Harold Pinter's plays are always on alert against any kind of physical or psyc...
PhDThere are three parts to this thesis, which explores how politicians, the public and broadcasters...
The aim of this work is to analyse how the comic effect is constructed from a series ofstereotypes t...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
In Harold Pinter's last completed project before his death, a screen adaptation of Anthony Shaffer's...
First used by the theatre critic Irving Wardle in a 1958 article, the expression comedy of menace ha...
This introduction to the Special Issue on cringe humour briefly traces the starting point of the con...
This article aims to approach the phenomenon of cringe in four steps: First, from a sociological per...
Cringe comedies differ from traditional embarrassment humour by being explicitly aimed at evoking no...
The purpose of this dissertation is to explore the effects that television satire has had upon the B...
Considering Pinter’s early revue sketches as integral elements of his early writing project, this ar...
Sharing a Laugh examines the social and cultural roles of television situation comedy in Britain bet...
2019 sees the 50th anniversary of the iconic British television comedy series Monty Python’sFlying C...
Harold Pinter, the Nobel laureate, is a literary giant of modern drama in English. His plays are cat...
AbstractCharacters in Harold Pinter's plays are always on alert against any kind of physical or psyc...
PhDThere are three parts to this thesis, which explores how politicians, the public and broadcasters...
The aim of this work is to analyse how the comic effect is constructed from a series ofstereotypes t...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...