Such Schadenfreude – Unpacking The Medley of Caustic Humor and Politics in Veep

Authors

  • Michael P. Young

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.327

Keywords:

humor, political satire, schadenfreude, television aesthetics, Veep

Abstract

This paper discusses the intersection of humor and politics from a media perspective, particularly through the lens of television aesthetics. As a growing branch of television studies, television aesthetics tends to refer to stylistic analysis but also, more rarely, to an interest in philosophical aesthetics as applied to television (Butler, 2010; Cardwell, 2013). I will focus on the genre of political satire and identify the critically acclaimed television series Veep (HBO, 2012 – present) as a program which exemplifies the expression and underlying values of a contemporary strain of aesthetic sensibility – schadenfreude – that runs through its axes of coarse disempowering humor and the portrayal of politics. Specifically, the paper explores how Veep’s affective reception results from humorously overlapping two of the more problematic aspects that persist in the political landscape, namely, self-interest and ineptitude.

This paper begins by reflecting on the universal prevalence of schadenfreude. The first section briefly traces key historical instantiations of political satire, understood as a genre that humorously derides the shortcomings and dissonances of a prevailing political milieu. The second section conceptualizes schadenfreude in satirical terms and underlies its philosophical foundations. The third section elaborates on the novelty of Veep by highlighting its gendered position as the first comedic fictional television program of a female president and outlines how its satirical modality depends on its coarse writing style and depiction of antiheroinism to make the problematic political milieu pleasurable to viewers whose normative experience of politics is frequently negative. The final section considers the ‘real world’ implications of Veep as a social commentary on unsavory political personas and perspectives.

 

Article received: May 10, 2019; Article accepted: July 6, 2019; Published online: October 15, 2019; Original scholarly article

 

Author Biography

Michael P. Young

University of Reading, Berkshire
United Kingdom

Michael P. Young is a native New Yorker with an insatiable wanderlust who is finally completing his Ph.D. in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading. His research interests include television aesthetics, German Romanticism, analytic philosophy, film studies and meandering around foreign locales looking for beautiful things. He is currently working on contemporary models of the feminine in American television thrillers in-between naps. Often one can find him procrastinating by checking emails sent to m.p.young@pgr.reading.ac.uk.

References

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Film and Television References

Commander in Chief. Created by Rod Lurie. Burbank: Touchstone Television, 2005–2006.

The Daily Show. Created by Madeleine Smithberg and Lizz Winstead. New York City: NEP Studio 52, 1999 – present.

Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Directed by Stanley Kubrick. London: Hawk Films, 1964.

House of Cards. Created by Beau Willimon. Beverley Hills: Media Rights Capital, 2013–2018.

In the Loop. Directed by Armando Iannucci. London: BBC Films, 2009.

Mafia! Directed by Jim Abrahams. Burbank, Touchstone Pictures, 1998.

Mars Attacks! Directed by Tim Burton. Burbank: Warner Bros., 1996.

Quantico. Created by Joshua Safran. Burbank: ABC Studios, 2015–2018.

Saturday Night Live. Created by Lorne Michaels. New York City: Broadway Video, 1981 – present.

Seinfeld. Created by Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld. Los Angeles: Castle Rock Entertainment, 1989–1998.

The Thick of It. Created by Armando Iannucci. London: BBC Four, 2005–2012.

Veep. Created by Armando Iannucci. New York City: HBO, 2012 – present.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.327 DOI: https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.327

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Published

15.10.2019

How to Cite

P. Young, M. (2019). Such Schadenfreude – Unpacking The Medley of Caustic Humor and Politics in Veep. AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, (20), 61–69. https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.327

Issue

Section

Main Topic: Contemporary Aesthetics of Media and Post-Media Art Practices