Description

Book Synopsis

This book looks at television comedy, drawn from across the UK and Ireland, and ranging chronologically from the 1980s to the 2020s. It explores depictions of distinctive geographical, historical and cultural communities presented from the insiders’ perspective, simultaneously interrogating the particularity of the lived experience of time, and place, embedded within the wide variety of depictions of contrasting lives, experiences and sensibilities, which the collected individual chapters offer. Comedies considered include Victoria Wood’s work on ‘the north’, Ireland’s Father Ted and Derry Girls, Michaela Coel’s east London set Chewing Gum, and Wales’ Gavin and Stacey. There are chapters on Scottish sketch and animation comedy, and on series set in the Midlands, the North East, the South West and London’s home counties. The book offers thoughtful reflection on funny and engaging representations of the diverse, fragmented complexity of UK and Irish identity explored through the intersections of class, ethnicity and gender.



Table of Contents

1. Introduction, Mary Irwin and Jill Marshall

England and its Regions

2. Our Close is Where England Lives’: Territorial Terrors in Ever Decreasing Circles, Mark Readman

3. Victoria Wood on TV: We’d like to Apologise to Viewers in the North, Jill Marshall

4. ‘Welcome to Sparkhill, Birmingham’: Regionality and Race in Citizen Khan, Paul Elliott

5. Anywhere but Jarrow: Hebburn and the Place of Geordie Comedy, James Leggott

6. Turkey Dinosaurs and Double Dinners: This Country’s Everyday Lives in Rural Gloucestershire, Mary Irwin 7. Michaela Coel’s Chewing Gum: Redefining ‘Unruliness’ in London’s East End, Laura Minor

8. ‘I’m Waiting for You’: Detectorists and the Comedy of Landscape, Brett Mills

The Celtic UK Nations and Ireland

9. ‘Down with this Sort of Thing’: Generation, Genre and the Undoing of Catholic Ireland in Father Ted, Marcus Free

10.‘Now Say Something in …. Welsh’: Gavin and Stacey in Translation, Daryl Perrins

11. Derry Girls: Navigating Regionality, Trauma and Nostalgia in the Contemporary Sitcom, Anthony P. McIntyre

12. Scroogin on a Greg: Scottish Animated and Online Comedy, Nichola Dobson

13.‘Limmy-nality’: 21st Century Glaswegian Scottish-ness in the Comedy of Brian 'Limmy' Limmond, Ian Wilkie.


UK and Irish Television Comedy: Representations

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A Hardback by Mary Irwin, Jill Marshall

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    View other formats and editions of UK and Irish Television Comedy: Representations by Mary Irwin

    Publisher: Springer International Publishing AG
    Publication Date: 20/09/2023
    ISBN13: 9783031236280, 978-3031236280
    ISBN10: 3031236289

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book looks at television comedy, drawn from across the UK and Ireland, and ranging chronologically from the 1980s to the 2020s. It explores depictions of distinctive geographical, historical and cultural communities presented from the insiders’ perspective, simultaneously interrogating the particularity of the lived experience of time, and place, embedded within the wide variety of depictions of contrasting lives, experiences and sensibilities, which the collected individual chapters offer. Comedies considered include Victoria Wood’s work on ‘the north’, Ireland’s Father Ted and Derry Girls, Michaela Coel’s east London set Chewing Gum, and Wales’ Gavin and Stacey. There are chapters on Scottish sketch and animation comedy, and on series set in the Midlands, the North East, the South West and London’s home counties. The book offers thoughtful reflection on funny and engaging representations of the diverse, fragmented complexity of UK and Irish identity explored through the intersections of class, ethnicity and gender.



    Table of Contents

    1. Introduction, Mary Irwin and Jill Marshall

    England and its Regions

    2. Our Close is Where England Lives’: Territorial Terrors in Ever Decreasing Circles, Mark Readman

    3. Victoria Wood on TV: We’d like to Apologise to Viewers in the North, Jill Marshall

    4. ‘Welcome to Sparkhill, Birmingham’: Regionality and Race in Citizen Khan, Paul Elliott

    5. Anywhere but Jarrow: Hebburn and the Place of Geordie Comedy, James Leggott

    6. Turkey Dinosaurs and Double Dinners: This Country’s Everyday Lives in Rural Gloucestershire, Mary Irwin 7. Michaela Coel’s Chewing Gum: Redefining ‘Unruliness’ in London’s East End, Laura Minor

    8. ‘I’m Waiting for You’: Detectorists and the Comedy of Landscape, Brett Mills

    The Celtic UK Nations and Ireland

    9. ‘Down with this Sort of Thing’: Generation, Genre and the Undoing of Catholic Ireland in Father Ted, Marcus Free

    10.‘Now Say Something in …. Welsh’: Gavin and Stacey in Translation, Daryl Perrins

    11. Derry Girls: Navigating Regionality, Trauma and Nostalgia in the Contemporary Sitcom, Anthony P. McIntyre

    12. Scroogin on a Greg: Scottish Animated and Online Comedy, Nichola Dobson

    13.‘Limmy-nality’: 21st Century Glaswegian Scottish-ness in the Comedy of Brian 'Limmy' Limmond, Ian Wilkie.


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