Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication

Less structured types of activism, such as community groups and social movements, are prevalent in society, but have been largely ignored in scholarly PR research to date. This article highlights humour as a communications tool in grassroots activism, thereby adding to the discipline’s understanding...

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Main Author: Wolf, Katharina
Other Authors: Lievrouw, Leah A.
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Peter Lang Publishing Inc. 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38272
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author Wolf, Katharina
author2 Lievrouw, Leah A.
author_facet Lievrouw, Leah A.
Wolf, Katharina
author_sort Wolf, Katharina
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Less structured types of activism, such as community groups and social movements, are prevalent in society, but have been largely ignored in scholarly PR research to date. This article highlights humour as a communications tool in grassroots activism, thereby adding to the discipline’s understanding of diversity in professional communication. Largely underutilised within a corporate context, humorous actions may promptly be dismissed as immature, unprofessional behaviour, assuming a lack of seriousness and communications expertise. However, the paper argues that humour performs a vital role in activist communication, particularly for those groups that are traditionally labelled too insignificant to be recognised by corporate stakeholder mapping exercises. Drawing on intensive periods of participant observation within one of Australia’s most prominent social movements, this paper identifies four core functions of humour in activist communication, which aid activists in conveying their key messages, but also ensure consistency and the long term survival of the group.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-382722017-02-28T01:38:07Z Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication Wolf, Katharina Lievrouw, Leah A. Less structured types of activism, such as community groups and social movements, are prevalent in society, but have been largely ignored in scholarly PR research to date. This article highlights humour as a communications tool in grassroots activism, thereby adding to the discipline’s understanding of diversity in professional communication. Largely underutilised within a corporate context, humorous actions may promptly be dismissed as immature, unprofessional behaviour, assuming a lack of seriousness and communications expertise. However, the paper argues that humour performs a vital role in activist communication, particularly for those groups that are traditionally labelled too insignificant to be recognised by corporate stakeholder mapping exercises. Drawing on intensive periods of participant observation within one of Australia’s most prominent social movements, this paper identifies four core functions of humour in activist communication, which aid activists in conveying their key messages, but also ensure consistency and the long term survival of the group. 2014 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38272 Peter Lang Publishing Inc. restricted
spellingShingle Wolf, Katharina
Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title_full Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title_fullStr Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title_full_unstemmed Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title_short Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humor in Activist Communication
title_sort beyond the corporate lens: the use of humor in activist communication
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38272