ABSTRACT This paper examines Maz Jobrani's Axis of Evil Comedy Tour (2007) as a foundational case for how stand‐up comedy operationalizes “humornizing”—a collaborative process through which humor invites audiences to reconstitute social boundaries and transform the marginalized “other” into a subject of shared humanity. Building on Ashouri Talooki's (2017) concept of humornizing adapted here to live performance, the study develops an analytic model rooted in performance studies (Harbidge 2012; Rayner 2012), while engaging Krefting's (2014) critique of minority comedy's ethical risks and Gillota's (2013) work on ethnic humor's ambivalence. The analysis demonstrates how Jobrani's routines—through strategic pronoun shifts, embodied accents, and reflexive meta‐commentary—leverage both affiliative humor and critical distance to challenge dehumanizing narratives while negotiating risks of stereotype reinforcement. Rather than treating humor as purely cognitive or affective, the paper foregrounds the co‐creative dynamics between performer and audience, revealing how shared laughter produces provisional communities wherein empathy flourishes. By tracing how neurobiological bonding, discursive sophistication, and embodied performance intersect, the study illustrates humornizing as a multilayered practice capable of fostering moments of vulnerability, provocation, and intercultural solidarity that rehearse pluralistic citizenship.
Reza Ashouri Talooki (Sat,) studied this question.