(No) laughing allowed-humour and the limits of soft power in prison

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Article
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Abstract

Although humour in prison is a widespread phenomenon, its meaning and function has not been examined in any detail. This article seeks to address this gap by analysing humour in prisonbased cognitive behavioural programmes. The empirical data from fieldwork in three different programme settings illuminate how the participants actively disrupt and twist the power hierarchies by providing a kind of humorous meta-commentary on the simplicity and class bias of the course content. This article suggests that humour could be seen as a tool that enables prisoners to fend off the psychological and rhetorical power of the cognitive behavioural programmes, even if only briefly. By developing the concept of 'soft resistance' and analysing humour as friction and code-switching, this article aims to illustrate and discuss the limits of soft power in prison-based therapeutic settings.

Publication Date
2017
Online Publication Date
2016-08-12
Acceptance Date
2016-07-08
Keywords
humour, cognitive behavioural programmes, prisons, soft power, soft resistance
Journal Title
British Journal of Criminology
Journal ISSN
0007-0955
1464-3529
Volume Title
57
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Sponsorship
This work was supported by the Danish Council for Independent Research | Social Sciences grant number 12-125308 for the research project Education in Social Skills and Emotional Training.