There exists a sociocultural function to humour that is geared towards maintaining order through a subversion (or inversion) of the more serious, structured status quo, and while there is a pragmatic side to the dispensation of humour across any given society, humour can also serve a fundamentally ontological function in determining and representing a group’s identity. Though notions of social organization and culture exist and are perpetuated primarily within a group’s literary canon, as espoused for example in the privileging of genres such as the epic or the novel as loci of national identity, this paper argues that such identities can be just as effectively – if not better – constructed through popular representations in humour, especia...
A semiology-based approach to understanding humour is being developed and an interpretation of humou...
Humour is part of human communication and can serve as an effective means for making contact, findin...
The 1800 Act of Union incorporating Ireland into Great Britain changed what it meant to be a citizen...
There exists a sociocultural function to humour that is geared towards maintaining order through a s...
We tend to take the phenomenon of humour for granted, seeing it for the most part as something innat...
Comedy is currently enjoying unprecedented growth within the British culture industries. Defying the...
Humor is strongly related to group boundaries. Jokes and other humorous utterances often draw on imp...
In this introductory article to a special issue on ‘the politics and aesthetics of humour’, we argue...
The Poem is a serious treatment of an amusing topic - what makes people in various nations and cultu...
Humour has been deeply discussed and studied from a translative point of view, and the past few deca...
Establishing a decisive nexus between gender, laughter, and media, this article not only critically ...
Seminario de Grado para optar al grado de Licenciado en Lengua y Literatura InglesaFacultad de Filos...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2010 Rory Wood-IngramThis thesis examines comedy and humo...
Why is humour so hard to understand? Rather like attempts to explain how music can move us, attempts...
Eighteenth and nineteenth century philosophers took interest in humour and, in particular, humorous ...
A semiology-based approach to understanding humour is being developed and an interpretation of humou...
Humour is part of human communication and can serve as an effective means for making contact, findin...
The 1800 Act of Union incorporating Ireland into Great Britain changed what it meant to be a citizen...
There exists a sociocultural function to humour that is geared towards maintaining order through a s...
We tend to take the phenomenon of humour for granted, seeing it for the most part as something innat...
Comedy is currently enjoying unprecedented growth within the British culture industries. Defying the...
Humor is strongly related to group boundaries. Jokes and other humorous utterances often draw on imp...
In this introductory article to a special issue on ‘the politics and aesthetics of humour’, we argue...
The Poem is a serious treatment of an amusing topic - what makes people in various nations and cultu...
Humour has been deeply discussed and studied from a translative point of view, and the past few deca...
Establishing a decisive nexus between gender, laughter, and media, this article not only critically ...
Seminario de Grado para optar al grado de Licenciado en Lengua y Literatura InglesaFacultad de Filos...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2010 Rory Wood-IngramThis thesis examines comedy and humo...
Why is humour so hard to understand? Rather like attempts to explain how music can move us, attempts...
Eighteenth and nineteenth century philosophers took interest in humour and, in particular, humorous ...
A semiology-based approach to understanding humour is being developed and an interpretation of humou...
Humour is part of human communication and can serve as an effective means for making contact, findin...
The 1800 Act of Union incorporating Ireland into Great Britain changed what it meant to be a citizen...