PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2006-01-20 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Did a Disaster Survivor Give This Answer When Asked About Church Closures? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • This email hit our inbox in January 2013: Versions of this same anecdote have been circulated after several recent natural disasters. After Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast of the U.S. in August 2005, the joke made the rounds of the internet in this form: In the wake of an outbreak of devastating tornadoes that hit the Southern U.S. in April 2011, this joke was dusted off and sent around anew: Urban legends and jokes are often used as vehicles to pass along negative perceptions about members of other groups because the process of telling them provides an at-arm's-length way of communicating prejudices by framing them as the underpinnings of funny stories. Tellers retain deniability for the content of what is being expressed by shrugging off any implications of racism and maintaining they're merely repeating amusing stories. In that vein, the above-quoted item delivers the goods quite effectively. Its humor is fueled by a number of nasty stereotypes about black people: they're unintelligent, they love fried chicken, and they're animalistic in terms of what motivates them (that is, they think in terms of food, clothing, shelter, shiny things, and sex). So when a black resident is asked her feelings about the loss of churches in her area due to widespread destruction wrought by a natural disaster, she naturally responds (in mammy-style dialect) with an answer unwittingly demonstrating that physical nourishment is a far more important part of her reality than is spiritual nourishment, mistaking a question about houses of worship for one about fast food outlets. (Church's and Popeyes are both popular chains of chicken restaurants.) Of course, there was no such interview in the aftermath of any of the natural disasters referenced above. Jokes employing the churches/Church's pun antedate the earliest example cited here by at least several years. For example, a 1997 USENET discussion on the Vatican's policy regarding divorce (to which someone responded with the suggestion that we should burn all the churches) drew the following comment: Black comedian George Wallace has also presented the same bit of humor as a Yo Momma joke: Another 1997 telling of this joke attributed it to black comic Daran Howard: (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url