In Mexico and Peru, denigrating racial humour about blacks and indigenous populations is prolific, despite the existence of colour-blind national ideologies (which minimize or negate the existence of racism) and social norms that silence various forms of race talk. This article draws on interviews and participant observation from these two countries to analyse the popular uses and interpretations of racial humour, and their consequences for racial ideology. We illustrate how racial humour serves to reproduce Mexican and Peruvian national ideology and reinforces the countries' racialized systems of domination. In this article, we identify three mechanisms involved in this process: 'going along' with jokes; framing racial humor as benign; and...
This study examines the use of humour by Black football coaches in England as a rhetorical device ag...
The article analyses the tradition of critical cartoons in Argentina using the lens of Freud’s conce...
“Laughing Off White Supremacy, or: The Politics of Laughter in African American Modernism” delineate...
The study of the scathing content of “¿Cómo se dice X en (language) Y?” jokes is compared to the cul...
This article analyses the conflicting understandings surrounding the recognition of anti-black racis...
Racism persists individually and institutionally in the U.S. and race-based comedy prevails in media...
The study of the scathing content of “¿Cómo se dice X en (language) Y?” jokes is compared to the cul...
Brazilian society has changed significantly within the past four decades, and convergent with that p...
This article explores a dual dynamic of simultaneous subordination and limited inclusion of Blacknes...
Among incidences of everyday racism, offensive jokes are writ large as a way of establishing and mai...
This article outlines the ‘reverse discourses’ of black, African-American and Afro-Caribbean comedia...
As Christie Davies theorizes, ethnic humor is a fundamental component of identity building as it str...
This study researches the reactions of people to disparaging jokes told by Whites and Hispanics. The...
The goal of this thesis is to explain the nature of ethnic humor in American society. This will be a...
For a long time, US cinema developed unshakeable stereotypes of Mexican ‘otherness’, with characters...
This study examines the use of humour by Black football coaches in England as a rhetorical device ag...
The article analyses the tradition of critical cartoons in Argentina using the lens of Freud’s conce...
“Laughing Off White Supremacy, or: The Politics of Laughter in African American Modernism” delineate...
The study of the scathing content of “¿Cómo se dice X en (language) Y?” jokes is compared to the cul...
This article analyses the conflicting understandings surrounding the recognition of anti-black racis...
Racism persists individually and institutionally in the U.S. and race-based comedy prevails in media...
The study of the scathing content of “¿Cómo se dice X en (language) Y?” jokes is compared to the cul...
Brazilian society has changed significantly within the past four decades, and convergent with that p...
This article explores a dual dynamic of simultaneous subordination and limited inclusion of Blacknes...
Among incidences of everyday racism, offensive jokes are writ large as a way of establishing and mai...
This article outlines the ‘reverse discourses’ of black, African-American and Afro-Caribbean comedia...
As Christie Davies theorizes, ethnic humor is a fundamental component of identity building as it str...
This study researches the reactions of people to disparaging jokes told by Whites and Hispanics. The...
The goal of this thesis is to explain the nature of ethnic humor in American society. This will be a...
For a long time, US cinema developed unshakeable stereotypes of Mexican ‘otherness’, with characters...
This study examines the use of humour by Black football coaches in England as a rhetorical device ag...
The article analyses the tradition of critical cartoons in Argentina using the lens of Freud’s conce...
“Laughing Off White Supremacy, or: The Politics of Laughter in African American Modernism” delineate...