Critical literacy centers discussions on power and social roles but often overlooks how students use transgressive humor as a means to interrogate power. Through examples of classroom interactions and anecdotes, Low analyzes the role of humor in classroom settings to uncover how humor interplays with critical inquiry, sensemaking, and nonsense-making. Articulated across the fields of literacy studies and humor studies, the book uses ethnographic data from three Central California high schools to establish linkages and dissonances between critical literacy education and adolescents' joking practices. Adopting the dialectic of punching up and punching down as a conceptual framework, the book argues that developing more nuanced understandings of transgressive humor presents educators with opportunities to cultivate deeper critical literacy pedagogies and that doing so is a matter of social justice.
Essential for scholars and students in literacy education, this book adds to the scholarship on critical literacy by exploring the subversive power of humor in the classroom.
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-Antero Garcia, Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Education, Stanford University, USA
"If you've ever been the class clown, or envied one, or been afraid of one, this book is for you. David E. Low connects humor to social justice and transformation, and does so with compassion for every English teacher out there."
-Jessica Zacher Pandya, Dean of the College of Education, California State University, Dominguez Hills, USA
"Through a crafty analysis of his experiences working with students in three schools in California, David E. Low invites us to open spaces for humor and comedy as possibilities for discomfort and transgression, and to make better schools. His work reminds us that when comedians are not gremlins or tricksters, they are nothing less than court jesters, happy to make oppressors smile."
-Raúl Alberto Mora, Associate Professor, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia








