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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Performing pregnancy: Comic content, critique and ambivalence in pregnant stand-up comedy

Sharon Lockyer, +1 more
- 02 Apr 2023 - 
- Vol. 26, pp 343-361
TLDR
This paper examined the cultural work of pregnant stand-up comedians and their performances, arguing that pregnancy functions simultaneously as comic content and critique in the performances, and argued that ambivalence is central to pregnant stand up comedy.
Abstract
Stand-up comedy has recently become a primary site where representations of pregnancy are increasingly prevalent. Yet little academic work focuses on pregnant stand-up comedians and their performances. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, this article examines the cultural work of pregnant stand-up comedy. Thematic analysis of pregnant stand-up comedy by Amy Schumer, Ellie Taylor and Ali Wong identifies three significant features characterising the performances: (1) Comedic Corporeality, Vulgarity and Ambiguity; (2) Breaking Silences through the ‘Unruly Expectant Mother’; and (3) Critiquing Maternity Inequality through Pregnant Stand-Up? We examine how pregnant stand-up comedy interacts with and disrupts dominant cultural pregnancy representations, illustrating how pregnancy functions simultaneously as comic content and critique in the performances. Such comic content and critique are characterised by complexity as ambivalence is central to pregnant stand-up comedy. We argue it is precisely such ambivalence that provides productive means to understand the cultural and theoretical significances of pregnant stand-up comedy.

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#ButNotMaternity: Analysing Instagram posts of reproductive politics under pandemic crisis

TL;DR: The authors performed a thematic analysis of a sample of 70 #ButNotMaternity Instagram posts during the COVID-19 pandemic and identified four themes that emerged from their analysis: individual experiences, loneliness and overcoming adversity, Voicing anger and absurdity, mobilising anger and calls to action and coordinated activism.
References
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Patients’ Responsibilities in Medical Ethics

Zhu Fengqing
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TL;DR: The authors explored the role played by disgust reactions in the generation and circulation of the chav figure through popular media and argued that the "chav mum" is produced through disgust reactions as an intensely affective figure that embodies historically familiar and contemporary anxieties about female sexuality, reproduction, fertility, and racial mixing.
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Sociological Ambivalence and Family Ties: A Critical Perspective

TL;DR: In this article, Luscher and Pillemer developed the concept of ambivalence as structurally created contradictions that are made manifest in interaction and discussed how their reconceptualization enhances the relevance of the concept to sociological analyses of family ties.