This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experiences through which it puts its audiences’ bodies, and it uses this as a point of departure to think about the genre’s cultural work. Based on the observation that no cringe comedy makes its viewers cringe for the whole duration of its storytelling, the article suggests that cringe comedies thrive on destabilizing and ambiguating the affective valence of their performances of embarrassment, constantly recalibrating or muddying the distance between viewer and characters. They are marked by tipping points at which schadenfreude and other types of humor tip into cringe, and reversely, at which cringe tips into something else. The article focuses on ...
Humorous utterances can be divided into those which are created for their own sake (that is, to amus...
This thesis examines the state of dark humour in sociology through an exploration of the humour foun...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article aims to approach the phenomenon of cringe in four steps: First, from a sociological per...
Cringe comedies differ from traditional embarrassment humour by being explicitly aimed at evoking no...
Cringe humor combines the seemingly opposite emotional experiences of amusement and embarrassment du...
This introduction to the Special Issue on cringe humour briefly traces the starting point of the con...
This thesis examines the operating principles of comedy narratives across literary and screen forms ...
International audienceIn the “age of cringe” (Schwanebeck 2021) and parallel to the emergence of “cr...
This article analyzes the Simpsons' reframing of the book The Grapes of Wrath (1939) by John Steinbe...
This article on brings together findings from humor studies, especially work on cringe comedy, and d...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
In this paper, I argue that NBC’s “The Office,” which ran from 2005 to 2013, transformed television ...
Humorous utterances can be divided into those which are created for their own sake (that is, to amus...
This thesis examines the state of dark humour in sociology through an exploration of the humour foun...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article approaches cringe comedy through the lens of its affectivity, of the somatic experience...
This article aims to approach the phenomenon of cringe in four steps: First, from a sociological per...
Cringe comedies differ from traditional embarrassment humour by being explicitly aimed at evoking no...
Cringe humor combines the seemingly opposite emotional experiences of amusement and embarrassment du...
This introduction to the Special Issue on cringe humour briefly traces the starting point of the con...
This thesis examines the operating principles of comedy narratives across literary and screen forms ...
International audienceIn the “age of cringe” (Schwanebeck 2021) and parallel to the emergence of “cr...
This article analyzes the Simpsons' reframing of the book The Grapes of Wrath (1939) by John Steinbe...
This article on brings together findings from humor studies, especially work on cringe comedy, and d...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...
In this paper, I argue that NBC’s “The Office,” which ran from 2005 to 2013, transformed television ...
Humorous utterances can be divided into those which are created for their own sake (that is, to amus...
This thesis examines the state of dark humour in sociology through an exploration of the humour foun...
This article argues that cringe humour in British television had begun at least by the early 1960s a...