A Genealogy of Refusal : Walking away from crisis and scarcity narratives

Satire is rich

Satire is rich because “everyone” knows what we’re laughing about?

Workplace Satire is a rich playground of ideas.  But, what are we laughing about when we laugh about librarians? What can we "brew" for librarians by stirring Satire's cauldron?

Everyone knows what the joke i
s when Tammy strips down right in the library, and the Librarian ignores her nakedness and instead cautions the group to be quiet saying "Shush, this is a library!" in the Jammy episode of Parks and Rec. Even a naked woman's hysterical strip tease isn't enough to interfere with a librarian's duty to say Shhhhh before all else?


Parks and Recreation: Ron and Jammy (American TV Series). Season 7, Episode 2. Jan 13, 2015.

Like in Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut or The BigU by Neal Stephenson, whether you dress it in a letterman's jacket or slip it into a co-ed's overtight T-Shirt, the bucolic setting of a campus makes a great stage for dark comedies, as well as for satirical and dystopian futures. Hocus Pocus is arguably Vonnegut's darkest and most troubling book.  Its protagonist has killed and sexually exploited more people more horribly than any of Vonnegut's other characters. Previously a professor fired for sleeping with the university president's wife, he writes his story out in a college library out one line at a time on scraps of paper and pages torn from books after the college has become a prison.





 

 


Stephenson, Neal. 1984. The Big U. New York: Vintage. https://www.biblio.com/9780394723624.

Parks and Recreation (American TV Series). 2009. Parks and Recreation (American TV Series). NBC.

Reference Tramp: She always answered “yes “ 

Bookmobile badgirl  she gave it away free all over town 
 

This page has paths: