Book review
VIEW FULL TEXT

Keywords

internet humour
internet memes
memes
multimodality
genres

How to Cite

Tsakona, V. (2023). Book review: Attardo, Salvatore (2023). Humor 2.0: How the Internet Changed Humor. Anthem Press. The European Journal of Humour Research, 11(4), 112–119. Retrieved from https://ww.europeanjournalofhumour.org/ejhr/article/view/890

Abstract

Book review

VIEW FULL TEXT

References

Archakis, A., & Tsakona, V. (2012). The narrative construction of identities in critical Education. Palgrave Macmillan.

Archakis, A., & Tsakona, V. (2019). Racism in recent Greek migrant jokes. Humour: International Journal of Humour Research, 32(2), 267-287.

Archakis, A., & Tsakona, V. (2021). Greek migrant jokes online: A diachronic-comparative study on racist humorous representations. Internet Pragmatics, 4(1), 28-51.

Attardo, S. (2020). Memes, memeiosis, and memetic drift: Cheryl’s Chichier She Shed. Media Linguistics/Медиалингвистика, 7(2), 146-168.

Balmas, M. (2014). When fake news becomes real: Combined exposure to multiple news sources and political attitudes of inefficacy, alienation, and cynicism. Communication Research, 41(3), 430-454.

Bergson, H. (1911/1901). Laughter: An essay on the meaning of the comic. Temple of Earth Publishing. http://www.templeofearth.com/books/laughter.pdf

Billig, M. (2005). Laughter and ridicule: Towards a social critique of humour. Sage.

Bybee, J. (2015). Language change. Cambridge University Press.

Davies, C. (1998). Jokes and their relation to society. Mouton De Gruyter.

Dawkins, R. (1976). The selfish gene. Oxford University Press.

Doona, J. (2021). News satire engagement as a transgressive space for genre work. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 24(1), 15-33.

Ervine, J. (2019). Humour in contemporary France: Controversy, consensus, and contradictions. Liverpool University Press.

Grice, H. P. (1975). Logic and conversation. In P. Cole, & J. L. Morgan (Eds.), Syntax and semantics, Volume 3: Speech acts (pp. 41-58). Academic Press.

Hopper, P. J., & Traugott, E. C. (2003/1993). Grammaticalisation. Cambridge University Press.

Knobloch-Westerwick, S., & Lavis, S. M. (2017). Selecting serious or satirical, supporting or stirring news? Selective exposure to partisan versus mockery news online videos. Journal of Communication, 67(1), 54-81.

McGraw, A. P., & Warren, C. (2010). Benign violations: Making immoral behaviour funny. Psychological Science, 21(8), 1141-1149.

Pérez, R. (2022). The souls of white jokes: How racist humour fuels white supremacy. Stanford University Press.

Raskin, V. (1985). Semantic mechanisms of humour. D. Reidel.

Tsakona, V. (2018). Online joint fictionalization. In V. Tsakona, & J. Chovanec (Eds.), The dynamics of interactional humor: Creating and negotiating humor in everyday encounters (pp. 229-255). John Benjamins.

Tsakona, V. (2020). Tracing the trajectories of contemporary online joking. Media Linguistics/Медиалингвистика, 7(2), 169-183.

Tsakona, V. (forthcoming). Investigating the internal cohesion of meme cycles: How many (sub)cycles can be generated by a memetic drift? In E. Vanderheiden & C.-H. Mayer (Eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Humour Research (2nd edition). Palgrave Macmillan.

Weaver, S. (2016). The rhetoric of racist humour: US, UK and global race joking. Routledge.

Wever, E. G. (1927). Figure and ground in the visual perception of form. The American Journal of Psychology, 38(2), 194-226.

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2023 The European Journal of Humour Research

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.