Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Satire is not medicine, it's better

“The problem may be that America isn’t really built for satire, especially in this distracted age. Context and meaning can’t keep pace with accelerated media, so the stage belongs to the loud, the literal, and the obvious. Satire requires reflection, not selfies. Education and knowledge help, too, but let’s not get greedy. Satire is an extension of will; it doesn’t exist the way popular comedy does. Space must be carved out, grain gone against. In the wake of the Paris massacre, some say that satire is a universal right. In a corrupt, violent world, no right is guaranteed, something that earlier satirists recognized, and Charlie Hebdo’s staff presumably understands. Satire is not medicine, it’s mockery; and when you mock those who deserve it, reaction is possible, though ideally not via bullets.' Dennis Perrin ☀

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