artykuły
Book review: Gironzetti, Elisa (2022). The Multimodal Performance of Conversational Humour. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Abstract Book review References Attardo, S. & Raskin, V. (1991). ‘Script theory revis(it)ed: Joke similarity and joke representation model’. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research
Winning battles with a joke: a qualitative inquiry of humour in the Indian Army
Abstract Humour in military organizations can be antithetical given the rigid hierarchy, high degrees of work formalization, and obedience to hierarchy. This paper explores how
Book review: Davis, Jessica Milner (ed.) (2022). Humour in Asian Cultures: Tradition and Context. London and New York: Routledge.
Abstract Book review References Attardo, S. (2001). Humorous Texts: A Semantic and Pragmatic Analysis. Berlin and New York: Mouton De Gruyter. Kitazume, S. (2008).
Humour in the classroom: forms and functions among Iranian EFL teachers
Abstract The present study was conducted with the purpose of investigating the use of humour by EFL teachers in a private language institute in the
Book review: Dore, Margherita (ed.) (2021). Humour Translation in the Age of Multimedia. London: Routledge.
Abstract Book review References Chiaro, D. (ed.) (2010). Translation, Humour and the Media. Translation and Humour Vol. 2. London: Continuum. Dore, M. (ed.) (2019). Humour
Book review: Weaver, Simon (2022). The Rhetoric of Brexit Humour: Comedy, Populism and the EU Referendum. London and New York: Routledge.
Abstract Book review References Classen, A. (ed.) (2010). Laughter in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Times: Epistemology of a Fundamental Human Behaviour, its Meaning,
Book review: Pérez, Raúl (2022). The Souls of White Jokes: How Racist Humor Fuels White Supremacy. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Abstract Book review References Du Bois, W. E. B. (2007). ‘The souls of white folk’, in Gates, H. L. Jr (ed.), Darkwater: Voices from Within
Book review: Ervine, Jonathan (2019). Humour in Contemporary France: Controversy, Consensus, and Contradictions. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
Abstract Book review References Archakis, A. & Tsakona, V. (2021). ‘Greek migrant jokes online: a diachronic-comparative study on racist humorous representations’. Internet Pragmatics 4 (1),
Book review: Kreuz, Roger (2020). Irony and Sarcasm. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Abstract Book review References Clark, H. H., & Schaefer, E. F. (1989). ‘Contributing to discourse’. Cognitive Science 13 (2), pp. 259–294. Dews, S. & Winner,
Book review: Eagleton, Terry (2019). Humour. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Abstract Book review
A multimodal analysis of humour as an engagement strategy in YouTube research dissemination videos
Abstract Science popularisation has received widespread interest in the last decade. With the rapid evolution from print to digital modes of information, science outreach has
Every corona is not a virus: a semiotic analysis of Coronavirus mimetic humour
Abstract This study is a visual semiotics analysis of Coronavirus memetic humour, aimed at ascertaining the implied meanings of selected Covid-19 related Facebook memes that
The tsifteteli of irony and the dance of the ignorant Lilipuans: a cultural identity conflict in an ostensibly childish song
Abstract This paper studies the old Greek children’s radio show Edo Lilipoupoli transmitted from December 1977 to May 1980 by the Third Program of the
‘Are we laughing at the same?’: a contrastive analysis of Covid-related memes in Czech, Chinese and Spanish
Abstract Humour is often employed as a coping mechanism, with therapeutic effects on those producing and receiving it (Christopher 2015; Samson & Gross 2012). This