Rossing, Jonathan P.2015-09-292015-09-292014-02Rossing, Jonathan P. (2014). Critical Race Humor in a Postracial Moment: Richard Pryor’s Contemporary Parrhesia. Howard Journal of Communications, 25(1), 16–33. DOI: 10.1080/10646175.2013.857369https://hdl.handle.net/1805/7069Racial truth-telling becomes a difficult project given the current sociopolitical context that privileges postracialism and neoliberal individualism. Critical race humor, however, remains a public and popular discourse where people not only speak but also engage powerful racial truths. This article presents critical race humor as a contemporary form of parrhesia, or frank and courageous criticism. As a critical practice, parrhesia resonates with tenets of critical race scholarship and critical communication scholarship. Using the truth-telling comedy of the late Richard Pryor as a case study, this article suggests that critical race humor could be understood as parrhesia for our time. Moreover, critical race humor as a form of public pedagogy might provide people with the skills and habits of thought necessary to think critically about and transform racial knowledge and reality.en-USIUPUI Open Access Policyparrhesiacritical race theoryrhetoricCritical Race Humor in a Postracial Moment: Richard Pryor’s Contemporary ParrhesiaArticle