You Had to Be There: Rape Jokes

Author:   Vanessa Place ,  Dave Hickey ,  Natasha Stagg
Publisher:   powerHouse Books,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781576879009


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   01 November 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $24.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

You Had to Be There: Rape Jokes


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Vanessa Place ,  Dave Hickey ,  Natasha Stagg
Publisher:   powerHouse Books,U.S.
Imprint:   powerHouse Books,U.S.
Dimensions:   Width: 11.40cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 17.80cm
Weight:   0.150kg
ISBN:  

9781576879009


ISBN 10:   1576879003
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   01 November 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

It may appear as an act of madness to publish a collection of jokes on rape in our politically correct atmosphere--but it is the right gesture, theoretically and politically. Vanessa Place demonstrates that, when things get really horrible, every gesture of dignity and compassion is a fake, and only humor works: humor which does not make fun of its object but bears witness to our impotence and failure to deal with the object appropriately. No wonder the best films about holocaust are also comedies; sometimes, laughter is the most authentic way to admit our perplexity and despair. Place's book is for everyone who has the courage to confront the horror of rape without the easy escape into comfortable compassion. --Slavoj i ek Place's work is risky from start to finish, but that is what makes it so uneasily potent. To Place, 'Art is violence, to time and space and representation.' Her work fully lends itself to risk because it thrives on tension through antagonism and the brutal honesty of the darker shades life has to offer. --The Michigan Daily (U of M newspaper) As seen in and heard on Observer, Mean and Sober podcast, Red Scare podcast, The Guardian


It may appear as an act of madness to publish a collection of jokes on rape in our politically correct atmosphere--but it is the right gesture, theoretically and politically. Vanessa Place demonstrates that, when things get really horrible, every gesture of dignity and compassion is a fake, and only humor works: humor which does not make fun of its object but bears witness to our impotence and failure to deal with the object appropriately. No wonder the best films about holocaust are also comedies; sometimes, laughter is the most authentic way to admit our perplexity and despair. Place's book is for everyone who has the courage to confront the horror of rape without the easy escape into comfortable compassion. --Slavoj i ek Place's work is risky from start to finish, but that is what makes it so uneasily potent. To Place, 'Art is violence, to time and space and representation.' Her work fully lends itself to risk because it thrives on tension through antagonism and the brutal honesty of the darker shades life has to offer. --The Michigan Daily (U of M newspaper) Contains 71 uninterrupted pages of the most f***ed-up jokes I've ever read in my life...Still, I found myself laughing at them. Despite the fact that there's nothing funny about rape, I couldn't stop the smile from spreading across my face when I read one-liners like Apparently 'Ramadan' isn't to be taken literally. Sorry, Dan! Though I was ashamed anything that terrible could make me chuckle, laughing at the idea of rape felt kind of good. It was like I was somehow bigger than it. --MEL magazine As seen in and heard on Observer, Mean and Sober podcast, Red Scare podcast, The Guardian, The Baffler, Art in America


It may appear as an act of madness to publish a collection of jokes on rape in our politically correct atmosphere--but it is the right gesture, theoretically and politically. Vanessa Place demonstrates that, when things get really horrible, every gesture of dignity and compassion is a fake, and only humor works: humor which does not make fun of its object but bears witness to our impotence and failure to deal with the object appropriately. No wonder the best films about holocaust are also comedies; sometimes, laughter is the most authentic way to admit our perplexity and despair. Place's book is for everyone who has the courage to confront the horror of rape without the easy escape into comfortable compassion. --Slavoj i ek


"""It may appear as an act of madness to publish a collection of jokes on rape in our politically correct atmosphere-but it is the right gesture, theoretically and politically. Vanessa Place demonstrates that, when things get really horrible, every gesture of dignity and compassion is a fake, and only humor works: humor which does not make fun of its object but bears witness to our impotence and failure to deal with the object appropriately. No wonder the best films about holocaust are also comedies; sometimes, laughter is the most authentic way to admit our perplexity and despair. Place's book is for everyone who has the courage to confront the horror of rape without the easy escape into comfortable compassion."" -- Slavoj Žižek ""Though there's an undeniable logic and rhythm to the unspooling, readers will be forced to navigate Place's text (or 'verbal artifact') on their own, without the usual niceties. This is a potentially terrifying, but perhaps also liberating, experience for readers coddled by the gatekeepers of predictability - one that makes commentary of either stripe seem perfunctory, a failure 'to go beyond either condemnation or understanding.'"" * Los Angeles Review of Books *  ""Place's work is risky from start to finish, but that is what makes it so uneasily potent. To Place, 'Art is violence, to time and space and representation.' Her work fully lends itself to risk because it thrives on tension through antagonism and the brutal honesty of the darker shades life has to offer.""   * The Michigan Daily (U of M newspaper) * ""Contains 71 uninterrupted pages of the most f***ed-up jokes I've ever read in my life...Still, I found myself laughing at them. Despite the fact that there's nothing funny about rape, I couldn't stop the smile from spreading across my face when I read one-liners like ""Apparently 'Ramadan' isn't to be taken literally. Sorry, Dan!"" Though I was ashamed anything that terrible could make me chuckle, laughing at the idea of rape felt kind of good. It was likeIwas somehow bigger than it."" -- MEL magazine ""The jokes' lack of specificity makes them infectious, like they could morph to fit and then violate in any context, given the chance. The platform Place offers the predatory makes no move toward absolution, for audience, performer, offender, or language; her project is instead a symbolic, over-the-top stand-in for something we haven't yet figured out how to do in the public arena: let offenses exist, unelided, while we figure out what to do about them."" * Contemporary Art Review LA * As seen in and heard on: Observer, Mean and Sober podcast, Red Scare podcast, The Guardian, The Baffler, Art in America, Slate"


It may appear as an act of madness to publish a collection of jokes on rape in our politically correct atmosphere--but it is the right gesture, theoretically and politically. Vanessa Place demonstrates that, when things get really horrible, every gesture of dignity and compassion is a fake, and only humor works: humor which does not make fun of its object but bears witness to our impotence and failure to deal with the object appropriately. No wonder the best films about holocaust are also comedies; sometimes, laughter is the most authentic way to admit our perplexity and despair. Place's book is for everyone who has the courage to confront the horror of rape without the easy escape into comfortable compassion. --Slavoj i ek Place's work is risky from start to finish, but that is what makes it so uneasily potent. To Place, 'Art is violence, to time and space and representation.' Her work fully lends itself to risk because it thrives on tension through antagonism and the brutal honesty of the darker shades life has to offer. --The Michigan Daily (U of M newspaper) As seen in and heard on Observer, Mean and Sober podcast


Author Information

Vanessa Place was the first poet to perform as part of the Whitney Biennial; a content advisory was posted. Selected performance venues include Getty Villa, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Detroit Museum of Contemporary Art; Mestno Musej, Ljubljana; Swiss Institute, New York; the Kitchen, New York; Andre Bely Center, St. Petersburg, Russia; Kunstverein, Cologne; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Frye Art Museum, Seattle; the Sorbonne; and De Young Museum, San Francisco. Exhibition work has appeared at MAK Center/Schindler House; Denver Museum of Contemporary Art; the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art; The Power Plant, Toronto; the Broad Museum, East Lansing; Various Small Fires, Los Angeles; and Cage 83 Gallery, New York. Books include Boycott; Statement of Facts; La Medusa; Dies: A Sentence; The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality, and Law; Notes on Conceptualisms, co-authored with Robert Fitterman, her translations from the French of Guantanamo (poetry, Frank Smith) and Image-Material (art theory, Dominique Peysson), and her art-audio book, Last Words. Place also works as a critic and criminal defense attorney specializing in sex offenses. Dave Hickey has been an art and cultural critic for over five decades, is a MacArthur Fellowship recipient and Peabody Award-winner, and is the author of six books. Natasha Stagg's novel, Surveys (Semiotext(e), Emily Books) was published in 2016. Her essays and stories appear in the books Excellences & Perfections by Amalia Ulman (Prestel, 2018), The Present in Drag by DIS (Distanz, 2016), and Intersubjectivity Vol. 2 by Lou Cantor (Sternberg Press, 2018).

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List