This article brings Erich Fromm and Theodor W. Adorno back into dialogue by discussing the cultural phenomena of humor and laughter based on their theoretical writings. I argue that what is typically considered socially critical humor, like off ensive jokes or harsh satire, often fails to meet the preconditions of criticism in the light of Adorno’s and Fromm’s thinking. Humor, to be socially critical, has to be life-affi rmative and non-positional, and it has to challenge the limits of humor. It is also claimed that in this scope, humor cannot be instrumental.peerReviewe
Recent work in the sociological critique of humour and comic media has challenged the notion that hu...
Humor is strongly related to group boundaries. Jokes and other humorous utterances often draw on imp...
Throughout its history, stand-up comedy has done much more than make people laugh. While many of th...
In this article, I claim that humor can be a form of social pathology. In opposition to the general ...
In this article, I analyze controversial humor and argue that the concept of disobedience is of cen...
The aim of this paper is to show how, taken at face value, it appears that Horkheimer and Adorno’s c...
It may seem unfitting to base a polemical thesis on the writings of a humorist. Most of us read humo...
This important new book provides a comprehensive analysis of humor from a social-psychological persp...
intellectual Identity and the Culture Industry: Critical Thought about Inte11\u27ectuals and Mass Cu...
Establishing a decisive nexus between gender, laughter, and media, this article not only critically ...
Humour and laughter have been regarded as suitable topics for research in the social sciences, but a...
Why has comedy become one of our most abiding ethical preoccupations as well as a dominant mode of p...
Buckley (law, George Mason Univ.) advances a descriptive and normative thesis about laughter. Descri...
Satire, Comedy and Mental Health examines how satire helps to sustain good mental health in a troubl...
Taking as a reference the observations made about the phenomenon of laughter by some of the most imp...
Recent work in the sociological critique of humour and comic media has challenged the notion that hu...
Humor is strongly related to group boundaries. Jokes and other humorous utterances often draw on imp...
Throughout its history, stand-up comedy has done much more than make people laugh. While many of th...
In this article, I claim that humor can be a form of social pathology. In opposition to the general ...
In this article, I analyze controversial humor and argue that the concept of disobedience is of cen...
The aim of this paper is to show how, taken at face value, it appears that Horkheimer and Adorno’s c...
It may seem unfitting to base a polemical thesis on the writings of a humorist. Most of us read humo...
This important new book provides a comprehensive analysis of humor from a social-psychological persp...
intellectual Identity and the Culture Industry: Critical Thought about Inte11\u27ectuals and Mass Cu...
Establishing a decisive nexus between gender, laughter, and media, this article not only critically ...
Humour and laughter have been regarded as suitable topics for research in the social sciences, but a...
Why has comedy become one of our most abiding ethical preoccupations as well as a dominant mode of p...
Buckley (law, George Mason Univ.) advances a descriptive and normative thesis about laughter. Descri...
Satire, Comedy and Mental Health examines how satire helps to sustain good mental health in a troubl...
Taking as a reference the observations made about the phenomenon of laughter by some of the most imp...
Recent work in the sociological critique of humour and comic media has challenged the notion that hu...
Humor is strongly related to group boundaries. Jokes and other humorous utterances often draw on imp...
Throughout its history, stand-up comedy has done much more than make people laugh. While many of th...