Loughborough University
Browse

File(s) under permanent embargo

Reason: This item is currently closed access.

Laughter and liability: the politics of British and Dutch television satire

journal contribution
posted on 2009-12-22, 15:36 authored by Stephen Coleman, Anke Kuik, Liesbet van Zoonen
Contemporary politicians face immense rhetorical and communicative challenges. Performing on the intertwined stages of politics, media (including Internet) and everyday life, they need to master diverse and contrasting repertoires of talk. Political communication research, at present, has ignored the question of how politicians face and experience these challenges, and how they reflect on the new communicative field. In this article, we begin to redress this situation by analysing and comparing the motives, experiences and reflections of politicians who appeared in the British satirical TV show, Have I Got News for You, and its Dutch adaptation, Dit was het Nieuws. Based on in-depth interviews with seven Dutch and 14 English MPs, we conclude that they draw from three repertoires to legitimise and reflect on their participation: a strategic, indulgent and anti-elitist repertoire. The first repertoire is predictable in the context of current political communication research, whereas the latter two add new dimensions of pleasure and bottom-up representation to it.

History

School

  • Social Sciences

Department

  • Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies

Citation

COLEMAN, S., KUIK, A. and VAN ZOONEN, L., 2009. Laughter and liability: the politics of British and Dutch television satire. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 11, pp. 652–665.

Publisher

© The Authors / Journal compilation © Political Studies Association and Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Version

  • NA (Not Applicable or Unknown)

Publication date

2009

Notes

This article is closed access. It was published in the British Journal of Politics and International Relations and is available from: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117980943/home

ISSN

1369-1481

Language

  • en