Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné

This article examines the 2014 case of French comedian Dieudonné and his purported incitement to hatred through his comedy act at the time, which hit national headlines and danced along the line of acceptable speech and making fun of the Holocaust. At the same time, Dieudonné’s comedy appealed to a...

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Main Author: Charlotte Elliott-Harvey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2020-09-01
Series:Open Library of Humanities
Online Access:https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4648/
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spelling doaj-c2d4f32ab5864c06a7552f72d29c7daf2021-08-18T11:16:04ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesOpen Library of Humanities2056-67002020-09-016210.16995/olh.528Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian DieudonnéCharlotte Elliott-Harvey0 This article examines the 2014 case of French comedian Dieudonné and his purported incitement to hatred through his comedy act at the time, which hit national headlines and danced along the line of acceptable speech and making fun of the Holocaust. At the same time, Dieudonné’s comedy appealed to a faction of French society that felt relegated and ignored by the French elite, a sentiment that was furthered by a clash between one religious group that has legal protections in place to protect it from Holocaust denial, versus another group that does not have similar protections in place for Islamophobic acts. This case study demonstrates how Dieudonné tapped into these sensitive areas of cultural life by engaging the communicative genres of humour and satire to draw attention to and toy with making fun of the Holocaust, though his comedy act, Le Mur (The Wall), a silly song about the Holocaust, and an arm gesture called the ‘quenelle’. Using a textual thematic analysis of online newspaper articles collected at the time from Le Figaro and Le Monde, as well as transcripts from ten in-person, semi-structured interviews conducted in Paris with activists, journalists, politicians, a lawyer, and a comedian, what the findings point to is that while Dieudonné appealed to a disenfranchised audience as a ‘provocateur’, he also highlighted how key factions of French society are struggling with inclusivity and a lack of social cohesion in a political context where laïcité, the separation of religious life and political life, is sacrosanct.https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4648/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlotte Elliott-Harvey
spellingShingle Charlotte Elliott-Harvey
Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
Open Library of Humanities
author_facet Charlotte Elliott-Harvey
author_sort Charlotte Elliott-Harvey
title Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
title_short Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
title_full Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
title_fullStr Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
title_full_unstemmed Considering Ethnic Group Tensions: The Symptomatic Case of French Comedian Dieudonné
title_sort considering ethnic group tensions: the symptomatic case of french comedian dieudonné
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Open Library of Humanities
issn 2056-6700
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This article examines the 2014 case of French comedian Dieudonné and his purported incitement to hatred through his comedy act at the time, which hit national headlines and danced along the line of acceptable speech and making fun of the Holocaust. At the same time, Dieudonné’s comedy appealed to a faction of French society that felt relegated and ignored by the French elite, a sentiment that was furthered by a clash between one religious group that has legal protections in place to protect it from Holocaust denial, versus another group that does not have similar protections in place for Islamophobic acts. This case study demonstrates how Dieudonné tapped into these sensitive areas of cultural life by engaging the communicative genres of humour and satire to draw attention to and toy with making fun of the Holocaust, though his comedy act, Le Mur (The Wall), a silly song about the Holocaust, and an arm gesture called the ‘quenelle’. Using a textual thematic analysis of online newspaper articles collected at the time from Le Figaro and Le Monde, as well as transcripts from ten in-person, semi-structured interviews conducted in Paris with activists, journalists, politicians, a lawyer, and a comedian, what the findings point to is that while Dieudonné appealed to a disenfranchised audience as a ‘provocateur’, he also highlighted how key factions of French society are struggling with inclusivity and a lack of social cohesion in a political context where laïcité, the separation of religious life and political life, is sacrosanct.
url https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4648/
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