'Offensive' jokes can tackle ethnic violence in India: study
Washington: The ability of offensive jokes to undermine intolerance is the subject of a new study.
In the study, a University of Kent anthropologist, Dr. Andrew Sanchez, explained how exchanges of offensive humour enable people to distance themselves from the values that inform religious and ethnic violence.
Based on research in a multi-ethnic workplace in India, the study shows how joking relationships between colleagues make an apparently offensive commentary on the public life of ethnic difference.
Dr. Sanchez looked at the unspoken political content of this humour to show why such jokes do not always cause offence.
The paper shows that the exchange of humorous insults implicitly critiques religious and ethnic violence, by suggesting that one's personal relations are not governed by the principles of offence and retaliation.
While communal politics never forgives insult and never forgets the past, Dr. Sanchez argues that offensive joking operates on more tolerant principles rooted in the present.
The paper is published by the journal History and Anthropology.