Fr. 139.00

Cosmic Humour and Philosophical Pessimism in Contemporary Culture

English · Hardback

Will be released 09.07.2026

Description

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An in-depth look at the concept of cosmic humour, a politically influential, philosophically pessimistic form of humour, this book explores the popularity of this comedic form across Anglophone culture since 1969 in literature, film and television. Connecting intergalactic hitchhikers to discworlds and Black segregationists by explaining how such absurd images spring from the rise of neoliberalism, techno-nihilism and political despondency, Cosmic Humour takes a cultural materialist approach to demonstrate the existence and significance of this as-yet-overlooked turn in popular humour. Reflective of and reproducing an increasingly pervasive loss of faith in established ideological and political institutions, and an increasing distaste for capitalist machinations, Oliver Rendle examines representations of cosmic humour in the novels of Douglas Adams, Terry Pratchett, Jason Pargin and Paul Beatty as well as the Monty Python films and the Daniel''s Everything Everywhere All at Once. Charting its course from the its origins with the Monty Python comedy troupe to its cultural turn towards more diverse and politically proactive developments in the millennium, this book brings to the fore the increasingly widespread and insistent anxieties that link Oxbridge dons to parodic cosmic horror and the satirical potential of Afropessimism. Addressing a critically significant oversight regarding intersections between the philosophy of horror, humour and contemporary politics, Cosmic Humour reveals why humour expressing a pessimistic outlook is becoming increasingly resonant over time.

List of contents










Introduction
Chapter One: 'The Whole Vexed Question of What is Going On': Philosophy, Politics and Absurdism in the Work of Monty Python
Chapter Two: The Conspiracy Against Arthur Dent: Douglas Adams and Cosmic Pessimism
Chapter Three: Consorting with Death: Humanism and Pessimism on the Discworld
Chapter Four: 'Dude, where's my interdimensional portal?': Lovecraftian Humour in the Twenty-First Century
Chapter Five: 'Unmitigated Blackness': Cosmic Humour and the Post-Racial World
Chapter Six: Everything, Everywhere All at Once: Reaffirming Pessimism
Conclusion
References
Index


About the author

Oliver Rendle is a writer, independent scholar and academic journal production editor based in the UK. He completed his PhD in the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies in 2022 and studies contemporary intersections between pessimistic philosophy and humour, and has been published in Pulse: The Journal of Science and Culture.

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