
God's Fools
Saints, Prophets, Martyrs, and the Making of Modern Comedy
Jason Crawford(Author)
Applause (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 30. April 2026
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-4930-8059-5 (ISBN)
Description
Comedians play a complicated role in modern culture. They get up on public stages to talk about nothing in particular, with no expertise. They go out of their way to put their flaws, failures, and shabbiness on display. They break social taboos and orchestrate their own persecution. And through it all, they seem to be touched with a kind of spiritual charisma. Sometimes they seem like prophets, speaking truths that no one else would dare. Sometimes they seem like children, wide-eyed and innocent. We can't stop listening to what they have to say.
In God's Fools, Jason Crawford tells the stories of these strange figures. He ranges over a motley crew of modern comedians, from the pioneers of early cinema to the provocateurs of contemporary stand-up. But he also follows the story of the comedian further back, into a surprising history of holy fools, wild prophets, and mischief-making saints. In his account, comic performers from Charlie Chaplin to the present mingle with older figures like Francis of Assisi, Symeon the Fool, the laughing martyrs Perpetua, Lawrence, and Akiva, and the weird hermit Thecla of Iconium. As he uncovers the through-lines that connect these ancient lives to the world of modern comedy, Crawford asks how comedians still fashion themselves as prophetic and sacred characters. He explores the things comedy shares with sacred experience: how jokes are like prophecies, and how comic resolutions are like apocalyptic visions. And he finds new ways of understanding the power of comedy in our own moment.
In God's Fools, Jason Crawford tells the stories of these strange figures. He ranges over a motley crew of modern comedians, from the pioneers of early cinema to the provocateurs of contemporary stand-up. But he also follows the story of the comedian further back, into a surprising history of holy fools, wild prophets, and mischief-making saints. In his account, comic performers from Charlie Chaplin to the present mingle with older figures like Francis of Assisi, Symeon the Fool, the laughing martyrs Perpetua, Lawrence, and Akiva, and the weird hermit Thecla of Iconium. As he uncovers the through-lines that connect these ancient lives to the world of modern comedy, Crawford asks how comedians still fashion themselves as prophetic and sacred characters. He explores the things comedy shares with sacred experience: how jokes are like prophecies, and how comic resolutions are like apocalyptic visions. And he finds new ways of understanding the power of comedy in our own moment.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Globe Pequot Press
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
479 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4930-8059-5 (9781493080595)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2026
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€28.49
Available for download

E-Book
02/2026
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€28.49
Available for download
Person
Jason Crawford holds a doctorate in medieval and early modern literature from Harvard, and he teaches in the English Department at Union University in Jackson, Tennessee. He has given lectures and presentations at places such as Duke, Harvard, Cambridge, Baylor, Lee University, and the Warburg Institute, and he has held fellowships at the Huntington Library, at Oxford University, and at the University of Tennessee's Marco Institute. His writing has appeared both in leading academic journals as well as publications like The Los Angeles Review of Books. He is the author of the book Allegory and Enchantment (2017).
Content
Introduction: What is a Comedian?
I. SAINTS
1. The Patron Saint of Laughter: Francis of Assisi
2. Unlucky Winners: from an Orphan Queen to an Awkward Black Girl
II. PROPHETS
Interlude: A Joke is a Prophecy
3. The Prophet in Agony: from Snuff the Clown to Shakespeare's Fool
4. The Prophet Confesses: Richard Pryor
III. MARTYRS
Interlude: Comedy is a Carnival
5. Hilarious Martyrs: from Perpetua of Carthage to Lawrence of Rome
6. Holy Fools: from Thecla in the Desert to Symeon in the City
IV. INNOCENTS
Interlude: Rites of Renewal
7. The Child Everlasting: Charlie Chaplin
8. Apocalyptic Comedy
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
I. SAINTS
1. The Patron Saint of Laughter: Francis of Assisi
2. Unlucky Winners: from an Orphan Queen to an Awkward Black Girl
II. PROPHETS
Interlude: A Joke is a Prophecy
3. The Prophet in Agony: from Snuff the Clown to Shakespeare's Fool
4. The Prophet Confesses: Richard Pryor
III. MARTYRS
Interlude: Comedy is a Carnival
5. Hilarious Martyrs: from Perpetua of Carthage to Lawrence of Rome
6. Holy Fools: from Thecla in the Desert to Symeon in the City
IV. INNOCENTS
Interlude: Rites of Renewal
7. The Child Everlasting: Charlie Chaplin
8. Apocalyptic Comedy
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index