Drawing upon the perspective of the cultural studies of emotions, this article examines the reception of political satire and the re-contextualization of humour. More precisely, it investigates the multiplicity of tensions that come into play in the production, erasure, rediscovery, and reception in BelarusianInternet media of politically oriented Russian television humour mocking the Belarusian president Alyaksandr Lukashenka. The very phenomenon of comical representation aims at triggering a particular type of viewer response: laughter.But what if there is no laughter? To study this phenomenon, the concept of unlaughter, coined by Michael Billig, is drawn upon. Resonating with Sara Ahmed’s term killjoy, it helps to uncover inequalities re...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
The Internet is a communication space where newly formed communities are searching for ways to refle...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
The research is concentrated on the increasing popularity of political context in humour if we take ...
The Russian state-funded international broadcaster RT is often accused of pedalling misinformation a...
The paper addresses a well-documented genre of Russian canned jokes from a socio-pragmatic perspecti...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
The paper analyzes the genesis of modern political humor and determines its position in the system o...
As a paralinguistic element of oral communication, laughter carries a variety of social meanings: he...
This paper by the guest editors serves as an introduction to the present special issue of Russian Li...
In this introductory article to a special issue on ‘the politics and aesthetics of humour’, we argue...
For a brief period following the collapse of the Soviet Union, a degree of political freedom existed...
The review article discusses three important new books focused on the topic of official Soviet comed...
The paper deals with the functions of irony in the English and Russian political discourse. Such fun...
When cynical distance and ironic posturing have become the prevalent means of relating to public lif...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
The Internet is a communication space where newly formed communities are searching for ways to refle...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
The research is concentrated on the increasing popularity of political context in humour if we take ...
The Russian state-funded international broadcaster RT is often accused of pedalling misinformation a...
The paper addresses a well-documented genre of Russian canned jokes from a socio-pragmatic perspecti...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
The paper analyzes the genesis of modern political humor and determines its position in the system o...
As a paralinguistic element of oral communication, laughter carries a variety of social meanings: he...
This paper by the guest editors serves as an introduction to the present special issue of Russian Li...
In this introductory article to a special issue on ‘the politics and aesthetics of humour’, we argue...
For a brief period following the collapse of the Soviet Union, a degree of political freedom existed...
The review article discusses three important new books focused on the topic of official Soviet comed...
The paper deals with the functions of irony in the English and Russian political discourse. Such fun...
When cynical distance and ironic posturing have become the prevalent means of relating to public lif...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
The Internet is a communication space where newly formed communities are searching for ways to refle...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...