Irony and sarcasm are two quite different, sometimes morally dubious, linguistic tropes. We can draw a distinction between them if we identify irony as a speech act that calls what is bad good and, correspondingly, sarcasm calls good bad. This allows us to ask, which one is morally worse. My argument is based on the idea that the speaker can legitimately bypass what is good and call it bad, which is to say that she may literally mean what she says. This is not true of the opposite case: one cannot bypass what is bad and, therefore, she paradoxically does not mean what she says. In other words, irony is a morally less guilty trope. What is bad has its faults and thus it can be ironized; what is good is without blemish and thus it is difficul...
Researchers have studied counterfactual statements, such as There\u27s not a cloud in the sky! utt...
This study offers a pragmatic account of verbal irony, arguing that verbal irony can be best treated...
Positive statements, such as A fine friend you are, can readily be used sarcastically. Negative st...
The analysis of the ethical implications concerning the use of irony is not an easy task. E...
This dissertation is about the moral importance of irony. In the first chapter, I introduce the topi...
Traditional theories of sarcasm treat it as a case of speakers meaning the opposite of what they say...
Abstract: The study of irony has always been a field of interest for diverse disciplines. Whereas ir...
The aim of my thesis is to collect and then analyse authentic ironic utterances from specific area. ...
The origin of irony is not only from Greek philosophy but also, it is a modern literary approach. Ir...
International audienceThis paper critically examines Leech’s (2014) view that verbal or conversation...
Verbal irony is a complex mode of communication which has attracted the attention of scholars from s...
This article introduces the Verbal Irony Procedure (VIP), a first systematic method for identifying ...
Abstract: In a standard (rhetoric) perspective ironic communication is considered a semantic inversi...
Situational irony is, first, explained as a severe violation of one or more established, non-moral n...
In a standard (rhetoric) perspective ironic communication is considered a semantic inversion between...
Researchers have studied counterfactual statements, such as There\u27s not a cloud in the sky! utt...
This study offers a pragmatic account of verbal irony, arguing that verbal irony can be best treated...
Positive statements, such as A fine friend you are, can readily be used sarcastically. Negative st...
The analysis of the ethical implications concerning the use of irony is not an easy task. E...
This dissertation is about the moral importance of irony. In the first chapter, I introduce the topi...
Traditional theories of sarcasm treat it as a case of speakers meaning the opposite of what they say...
Abstract: The study of irony has always been a field of interest for diverse disciplines. Whereas ir...
The aim of my thesis is to collect and then analyse authentic ironic utterances from specific area. ...
The origin of irony is not only from Greek philosophy but also, it is a modern literary approach. Ir...
International audienceThis paper critically examines Leech’s (2014) view that verbal or conversation...
Verbal irony is a complex mode of communication which has attracted the attention of scholars from s...
This article introduces the Verbal Irony Procedure (VIP), a first systematic method for identifying ...
Abstract: In a standard (rhetoric) perspective ironic communication is considered a semantic inversi...
Situational irony is, first, explained as a severe violation of one or more established, non-moral n...
In a standard (rhetoric) perspective ironic communication is considered a semantic inversion between...
Researchers have studied counterfactual statements, such as There\u27s not a cloud in the sky! utt...
This study offers a pragmatic account of verbal irony, arguing that verbal irony can be best treated...
Positive statements, such as A fine friend you are, can readily be used sarcastically. Negative st...