The Necessity of Satire in Media Literacy: Stephen Colbert’s Use of Sophistic and Socratic Irony
29. Okt. 2018
Über diesen Artikel
Online veröffentlicht: 29. Okt. 2018
Seitenbereich: 187 - 207
Eingereicht: 21. Juli 2018
Akzeptiert: 31. Aug. 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/bjlp-2018-0008
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© 2018 Andrew C. Jones, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Media literacy campaigns champion systematic thinking and high elaboration in the fight against fake news. However, they often overlook an ancient tool for discrediting demagogues and destroying disinformation: satire. This essay explores how satirist Stephen Colbert used irony in his 2010 congressional testimony, arguing that Colbert’s shift from Socratic to Sophistic irony encouraged listeners to think for themselves through a more central information-processing route. The essay concludes that irony increases recognition of fake news, but warns that an overreliance on Sophistic irony undermines an appreciation of truth, and requires the reintroduction of Socratic irony as a counter balance.