Knowledge about humor
Autor: | Kuipers, G., Attardo, S. |
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Přispěvatelé: | Cultural Sociology (AISSR, FMG) |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Script-Based Semantics: Foundations and Applications : Essays in Honor of Victor Raskin, 93-114 STARTPAGE=93;ENDPAGE=114;TITLE=Script-Based Semantics Script-Based Semantics ISBN: 9781501511707 |
Popis: | Humor is one of the forms of communication that is most likely to fail. Such humor failure is of interest to humor scholars because it highlights the mechanisms in making humor work (or not). Existing work on humor failure is mainly done in linguistics, and focuses on humor failure as a result of a lack of knowledge. This article argues that humor success and failure depend on Knowledge about Humor: widely shared (though not uncontested), group specific or culture-specific cultural rules and conventions regarding the use of humor. Using examples from humor research, my own empirical work, every-day life and current affairs, I show that different groups have different rules and expectations regarding 1. how, 2. when, 3. by whom and with whom humor is used. Such knowledge about humor is what sociologists refer to as practical knowledge: learned behavior that native users experience as natural, but with clear regularities that researchers and clever individuals can “decipher” as rules or rule-like. I argue that knowledge about humor should be included in script-based theories of humor as an additional knowledge resource: KaH. Hierarchically, KaH can be positioned “outside” or “above” previously defined knowledge resources. This is a major contribution sociology can make to the rich tradition of script-based humor theories as developed originally by Victor Raskin in 1985. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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