Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie'
This paper examines stand-up comedy in light of the persona studies idea of proliferation of the public self to consider the ways comedians are represented and self-presented. Stand-up comedy as a performance mode deploys a literal version of Goffman’s front-stage and back-stage personas, raising qu...
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doaj-3fb76e9498d54e7bbece90ecbd170ca02020-11-24T21:08:15ZengDeakin UniversityPersona Studies2205-52582015-04-011110.21153/ps2015vol1no1art415442Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie'Melanie Piper0University of QueenslandThis paper examines stand-up comedy in light of the persona studies idea of proliferation of the public self to consider the ways comedians are represented and self-presented. Stand-up comedy as a performance mode deploys a literal version of Goffman’s front-stage and back-stage personas, raising questions about who comedians “really” are. Where the simultaneous observation of the on- and off-stage personas of comedy performers was previously only afforded in representational fiction, the diversification of what constitutes on-stage space for comedians has provided opportunities for comedians to perform versions of their back-stage selves in a broader variety of public, front-stage spaces. In the case of American comedian Louis C.K., his television series Louie has proven to be a liminal entity that operates in the spirit of presentational media, while produced, constructed, and distributed as representational media. This paper examines Louie to articulate cultural understandings of the front-stage and back-stage personas of personal, confessional comedians like C.K. who present aspects of their private lives in their public work. In addition, I look at how C.K. asserts his public persona as a self-presentational meta-presence within the representational depiction of his fictionalised self on television. The result is a step toward considering self-performance in the front- and back-stage personas of stand-up comedians, and how representational media with a distinct authorial voice can act in the spirit of presentational media.https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/415personastand-up comedyself-performanceLouis C.K.Louie |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Melanie Piper |
spellingShingle |
Melanie Piper Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' Persona Studies persona stand-up comedy self-performance Louis C.K. Louie |
author_facet |
Melanie Piper |
author_sort |
Melanie Piper |
title |
Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' |
title_short |
Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' |
title_full |
Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' |
title_fullStr |
Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' |
title_full_unstemmed |
Louie, Louis: The Fictional, Stage, and Auteur Personas of Louis C.K. in 'Louie' |
title_sort |
louie, louis: the fictional, stage, and auteur personas of louis c.k. in 'louie' |
publisher |
Deakin University |
series |
Persona Studies |
issn |
2205-5258 |
publishDate |
2015-04-01 |
description |
This paper examines stand-up comedy in light of the persona studies idea of proliferation of the public self to consider the ways comedians are represented and self-presented. Stand-up comedy as a performance mode deploys a literal version of Goffman’s front-stage and back-stage personas, raising questions about who comedians “really” are. Where the simultaneous observation of the on- and off-stage personas of comedy performers was previously only afforded in representational fiction, the diversification of what constitutes on-stage space for comedians has provided opportunities for comedians to perform versions of their back-stage selves in a broader variety of public, front-stage spaces. In the case of American comedian Louis C.K., his television series Louie has proven to be a liminal entity that operates in the spirit of presentational media, while produced, constructed, and distributed as representational media. This paper examines Louie to articulate cultural understandings of the front-stage and back-stage personas of personal, confessional comedians like C.K. who present aspects of their private lives in their public work. In addition, I look at how C.K. asserts his public persona as a self-presentational meta-presence within the representational depiction of his fictionalised self on television. The result is a step toward considering self-performance in the front- and back-stage personas of stand-up comedians, and how representational media with a distinct authorial voice can act in the spirit of presentational media. |
topic |
persona stand-up comedy self-performance Louis C.K. Louie |
url |
https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/415 |
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