This paper contributes a discursive perspective on how academics employ self-deprecating humour and laughter to talk about and construct the struggles they faced in academia. Underpinned by ethnomethodological approaches to studying spoken interactions, the paper argues that just as utterances accomplish social actions, academic struggles are discursively constructed. The data came from 30 qualitative interviews with academics working in applied linguistics and related fields in the UK. They ranged from early career researchers to professor emeritus. Drawing insights from higher education studies, pragmatics and interactional linguistics, the paper examines how speakers employed self-deprecating humour and laughter as interactional resource...
In this paper we take up the topic of conversational humor by analyzing instances of teasing, joking...
The use of humor at the workplace has been well researched in Western countries but such studies in ...
My PhD study explores humour in British academic lectures and Chinese students' perceptions of it. T...
This paper addresses the ways in which humour is used by university academics to shape teaching pers...
Humour scholarship is a fertile interdisciplinary field drawing from psychology, sociology, and ling...
peer-reviewedThis chapter brings instances of humour and laughter into relief using a corpusof authe...
The linguistic expression of humour is a multifaceted area of research that encompasses the cognitiv...
This book examines what speakers try to achieve by producing \u2018laughter-talk\u2019 (the talk pre...
First paragraph: Despite what some people might think, academics are not all humourless boffins out ...
This paper examines the role of laughter in intercultural pragmatics. It takes as its starting point...
Laughter is the most frequently transcribed paralinguistic feature in social research interview tran...
textThe phenomenon of laughter has intrigued many philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, and – m...
The use of humor at the workplace has been well researched in Western countries but such studies in ...
The literature on humour in teaching frequently defaults to a series of maxims about how it can be u...
Laughter is a socio-embodied phenomenon that is often found in research accounts. Rather than simply...
In this paper we take up the topic of conversational humor by analyzing instances of teasing, joking...
The use of humor at the workplace has been well researched in Western countries but such studies in ...
My PhD study explores humour in British academic lectures and Chinese students' perceptions of it. T...
This paper addresses the ways in which humour is used by university academics to shape teaching pers...
Humour scholarship is a fertile interdisciplinary field drawing from psychology, sociology, and ling...
peer-reviewedThis chapter brings instances of humour and laughter into relief using a corpusof authe...
The linguistic expression of humour is a multifaceted area of research that encompasses the cognitiv...
This book examines what speakers try to achieve by producing \u2018laughter-talk\u2019 (the talk pre...
First paragraph: Despite what some people might think, academics are not all humourless boffins out ...
This paper examines the role of laughter in intercultural pragmatics. It takes as its starting point...
Laughter is the most frequently transcribed paralinguistic feature in social research interview tran...
textThe phenomenon of laughter has intrigued many philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, and – m...
The use of humor at the workplace has been well researched in Western countries but such studies in ...
The literature on humour in teaching frequently defaults to a series of maxims about how it can be u...
Laughter is a socio-embodied phenomenon that is often found in research accounts. Rather than simply...
In this paper we take up the topic of conversational humor by analyzing instances of teasing, joking...
The use of humor at the workplace has been well researched in Western countries but such studies in ...
My PhD study explores humour in British academic lectures and Chinese students' perceptions of it. T...