I’m Only Kidding: On Racist and Ethnic Jokes

Southern Journal of Philosophy 58 (4):534-546 (2020)
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Abstract

Toward the end of his book Jokes, perhaps the best known philosophical treatment of the subject, Ted Cohen includes a notorious joke about a group of young Black men who are deterred from committing a gang rape by being thrown a basketball. This is a joke that perplexes Cohen and that he admits plays into stereotypes that presuppose the mindless obsession of Black youths with basketball as well as their unbridled sexuality. He agrees that the joke is morally bad and that it would be a better world without it. But he denies that its evil compromises its alleged funniness. He writes: “Wish that there were no mean jokes. Try remaking the world so that such jokes will have no place, will not arise. But do not deny that they are funny. That denial is a pretense that will help nothing.” In this paper, I want to challenge the claim that the moral defectiveness of a joke, especially a racist joke, cannot ever compromise its capacity to be funny.

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Noel Carroll
CUNY Graduate Center

Citations of this work

Is this “fascist” laughter? Notes on the ethics of humor.Riccardo Carli - 2023 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 61 (3):427-438.

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