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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Article
Author(s)
Vladislav Vasilev
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DOI:10.17265/1537-1506/2022.04.003
Affiliation(s)
Sofia University, St. Kliment Ohridski, Bulgaria
ABSTRACT
In the wake of internet spoiling
global audiences with memes and political satire, humor established itself as an
intrinsic part of contemporary political rhetoric. A universal notion of humor and
free speech, however, yet remain an abstract concept as the national context and
the meta-narrative allow partisan interpretation, thus drawing the line between
laughter and unlaughter. Nonetheless, the clichéd view of the satirist as a rebel,
“speaking truth to power” is struggling to fit the image of the right-wing populists,
using humor as a tool to aid marketing political ideas both nationally and globally.
In respect to political speech, while humor is an eligible means for singling out
political allies globally, it is the national state that is the agora on which standards
and limits of free speech, ergo what is humor, are negotiated. This article tackles
how humor in Bulgarian election campaign in 2021-2022 is used to serve the populist
right-wing agenda in pursuit of political advantages over opponents and how the
usage of global context fits in the local framework. In a field of political distrust
and competing polar ideologies, the problem resides in how the national nuances
of defining humor affect political meanings, identity, and the local discourse on
culture wars. The article also takes a transnational comparative approach to political
humor in the context of its partisan exploit for populist political purposes in
European democracies.
KEYWORDS
free speech, Bulgaria, political humor, populism, elections, far-right populism
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