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This paper analyzes Biswa Kalyan Rath’s 2017 Hindi stand-up special, Biswa Mast Aadmi , as a seminal text in the evolution of Indian digital comedy. Moving beyond the punchline-driven, observational humor prevalent in the mid-2010s, Rath employs a distinct persona of the "reluctant, anxious everyman." This paper argues that the special’s core innovation lies in its use of meta-humor , linguistic code-switching , and the performance of existential alienation to construct a new comedic archetype: the mast aadmi (carefree man) who is, paradoxically, neither carefree nor fully a man in the traditional patriarchal sense. By examining the special’s structure, thematic preoccupations (anxiety, mediocrity, urban loneliness), and narrative digressions, this paper positions Biswa Mast Aadmi as a critique of aspirational Indian masculinity and a precursor to the more introspective, "sad-comic" wave of Indian stand-up. 1. Introduction In 2017, the Indian stand-up comedy scene was transitioning from viral YouTube clips to full-length Amazon Prime Video specials. While contemporaries like Zakir Khan leaned into the sakht launda (tough guy) or Kenny Sebastian into the quirky musician, Biswa Kalyan Rath offered something jarringly different: a stammering, visibly uncomfortable, bicycle-riding IIT graduate who seemed perpetually trapped in his own head.

Biswa Mast Aadmi (translation: "Biswa is a great/carefree man") is a title steeped in irony. The 45-minute special, recorded in a modest auditorium, eschews the grandeur of stadium comedy. Instead, Rath presents a character study of a man failing to live up to the very title he claims. This paper posits that the special’s primary contribution to comedic theory is the . Rath often buries, delays, or outright abandons jokes in favor of exploring the awkwardness of the comedic transaction itself. 2. Theoretical Framework: The Reluctant Performer Drawing on Henri Bergson’s theory that comedy arises from "something mechanical encrusted on the living," Rath’s persona is deliberately mechanical—not in rhythm, but in social malfunction. His jokes about being unable to talk to women, his hatred for small talk, and his obsessive analysis of mundane events (e.g., asking for a raise, navigating a traffic jam) align with what critic D. L. Rosenhan termed the "pathology of normalcy." Biswa Kalyan Rath - Biswa Mast Aadmi 2017 Hindi...

Deconstructing the Anti-Hero of Humor: Alienation, Authenticity, and Meta-Narrative in Biswa Kalyan Rath’s Biswa Mast Aadmi (2017) This paper analyzes Biswa Kalyan Rath’s 2017 Hindi

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