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Catch-22 Part 2: Social Commentary 1604 Views
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Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:04
Catch-22
- 00:06
a la Shmoop
- 00:07
Let's focus on...
- 00:09
more or less the history of satire.
Full Transcript
- 00:12
In 1961, when the book came out,
- 00:17
satirizing was a new thing.
- 00:20
It wasn't something that was so common.
- 00:22
Today, Jon Stewart --
- 00:23
You know, and Jon Stewart
- 00:25
really, he will point to Saturday Night Live's
- 00:27
nightly news and not necessarily the news
- 00:31
as something he cloned.
- 00:32
And that was a clone of something that was done in Canada and so on.
- 00:35
So it's not like this is new today
- 00:37
or striking today.
- 00:38
But in 1961,
- 00:40
making fun of anything coming out of the Cold War
- 00:42
was a brand new thing.
- 00:45
And the Cold War, it was like
- 00:47
laughter was not --
- 00:49
Like you had to pay a tax on each time you guffawed.
- 00:52
So talk to us about
- 00:53
the historical context in 1961
- 00:56
and sort of why that was so shocking to the public
- 01:00
in the serious era that we had just come out of.
- 01:03
Yeah, you really hit the nail on the head there.
- 01:05
What Heller did was shocking.
- 01:07
The fact that he was making fun
- 01:09
of war and so much.
- 01:12
This wasn't one joke in a serious novel.
- 01:15
This entire novel is a parody or satire of war.
- 01:19
And this is something that people weren't used to.
- 01:21
Today, we expect it.
- 01:23
That's really the way
- 01:24
a lot of points are made today is through satire.
- 01:28
And a lot of the way that we understand the news
- 01:30
and current events is through satire.
- 01:32
But back then, it was just unheard of almost.
- 01:37
And it wasn't like no one had ever made light of serious topics.
- 01:41
Satire goes all the way back to
- 01:43
the Classical period and people have been doing this forever.
- 01:47
But in, like you said, Cold War, et cetera,
- 01:49
this was not a time that people were ready for that.
- 01:51
But it did kind of then pave the way
- 01:54
for more of that.
- 01:55
So then we get stuff like Dr. Strangelove and MASH,
- 01:59
which then followed in the footsteps of Catch-22.
- 02:01
And this is these -- You know, MASH,
- 02:03
this is another huge cultueral phenomenon
- 02:04
that we wouldn't have necessarily had
- 02:06
if Heller hadn't paved the way.
- 02:08
So we do have to remember
- 02:10
the historical context here.
- 02:11
Another cool thing about the fact that it was written in 1961
- 02:14
is that we're in Vietnam era.
- 02:16
So while Heller is
- 02:19
talking about World War II --
- 02:21
And we only know it's World War II very vaguely.
- 02:24
It's almost anticipating what was gonna start happening
- 02:26
in the next few years with the anti-war protests.
- 02:29
Because that's what Heller's doing.
- 02:31
This is an anti-war protest.
- 02:34
And a few years later,
- 02:36
we start seeing this in huge amounts in the U.S.
- 02:40
How did Catch-22 differ from its contemporary works of literature?
- 02:44
How did Catch-22 influence social commentary?
- 02:49
[ boing ]
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