Humor Theories
Humor Theories
Humor Theories
by Don L. F. Nilsen
and Alleen Pace Nilsen
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RELEASE
Contrast
Incongruity
Resolution
Sublimation
Liberation
Economy
Aggression
Superiority
Triumph
Derision
Disparagement
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Script-Model Grammar
Raskins 1985 Semantic-Script Theory of Humor
(SSTH) sees humor as a violation of Grices
cooperative principle.
A joke consists of two overlapping scripts.
The two scripts are in opposition (bona-fide vs.
scatalogical)
The punch line changes the joke from the bona-fide
to the scatalogical script.
(Attardo [2007] 108)
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Overlapping Scripts
Overlapping scripts occur not only in jokes, but also
in the allegory, the oxymoron, the conceit, the simile,
and perhaps in all allusion, symbolism, double
entendre and intertextuality.
Overlapping scripts also occur in the master tropes-metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, and irony.
And for all of these literary forms, there is the bonafide (or literal) script, and the non-bona-fide (or
figurative) script.
(Triezenberg [2008]: 536)
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Humor Enhancers
Katrina Triezenberg notes that humorous
discourse also has humor enhancers.
A humor enhancer is a narrative technique
that is not necessarily funny in and of itself,
but that helps the audience to understand that
the text is supposed to be funny, that warms
them up to the author and to the text so that
they will be more receptive to humor, and that
magnifies their experience of humor in the
text.
(Triezenberg [2008]: 537-538)
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Script Opposition
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
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Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud distinguishes between
innocent and tendentious jokes.
(Attardo [2007], 104).
RIDDLE: What do you get when you cross a
mafioso with a postmodern theorist?
ANSWER: Someone who will make you an
offer you cannot understand.
(Attardo [2007] 109)
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Humor Sophistication
Victor Raskin notes that sophistication
in humor is similar to sophistication
more generally, and that it entails:
Rarity, expensiveness, availability,
complexity, exoticness, subtlety,
refinement, obscurity, prestigiousness,
desirability, unexpectedness, etc.
(Raskin [2008]) 12)
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Ranking of Humor
Sophistication
1. He was a man of letters. He worked at the Post
Office.
2. I am very unhappy. I have two girlfriends, and both
are cheating on me.
3-9. No Examples Given
10. Whats the difference between the sparrow? No
difference whatsoever. Both halves are identical,
especially the left one.
(Raskin [2008] 13)
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Humor is hostile
Humor diminishes self-control.
Humor is irresponsible.
Humor is insincere.
Humor is idle.
Humor is hedonistic.
Humor fosters sexual license.
Humor fosters anarchy.
Humor is foolish.
(Morreall [2008] 237-238)
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HUMOR THEORIES
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FEATURES OF HUMOR:
INCONGRUITY AND
INCONGRUITY RESULUTION
Unresolved
Resolved
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FEATURES OF HUMOR:
SURPRISE AND TENSION
Surprise
Garden Path
Epiphany
Tension and Relief
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Ambiguity
Exaggeration
Understatement
Hostility
Incongruity or Irony
Situation-Insight
Sudden Insight
Superiority
Surprise or Shock
A Trick or Twist
Word Play
(A. Nilsen Living Language 202-203)
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PSYCHOLOGICAL
FUNCTIONS OF HUMOR
Arousal
Social Control
Establishment of Superiority
Relief, and Release
Ego Defense, Coping, and Saving Face
Gaining Status
Healing
Testing Limits
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SELF-DISPARAGEMENT
Self-disparagement humor is actually
intended to empower the user. Here are
some effective ads using selfdisparagement:
Terminix Pest Control: When you think of
pests, think of us.
Twist Lemon-Menthol Cigarettes: Our new
menthol is a lemon.
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EDUCATIONAL
FUNCTIONS OF HUMOR
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!SUBJECTS OF HUMOR
Ethnic Identification
Politics
Sexual Roles and Scatology
Occupations
Religion and Belief Systems
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References:
Apter, Michael J. Humour and Reversal Theory. Chapter 8 in Michael
Apters The Experience of Motivation: The Theory of Psychological
Reversals. New York, NY: Academic Press, 1982.
Apter, Michael J., and Kenneth C. P. Smith. Humour and the Theory of
Psychological Reversals. in Chapman and Foot (1977): 95-100.
Attardo, Salvatore. The General Theory of Verbal Humor, Twenty Years
After. HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 24-2 (2011):
123.
Attardo, Salvatore. Linguistic Theories of Humor. Berlin, Germany: Walter
de Gruyter, 1994.
Attardo, Salvatore. A Multiple-Level Analysis of Jokes. HUMOR:
International Journal of Humor Research 2.4 (438-439).
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Boskin, Joeph, ed. The Humor Prism in 20th-Century America. Detroit, MI:
Wayne State University Press, 1997.
Cann, Arnie, and Katherine C. Etzel. Remembering and Anticipating
Stressors: Positive Personality Mediates the Relationship with Sense
of Humor. HUMOR 21.2 (2008): 157-178.
Chafe, Wallace L. The Importance of Not Being Earnest: The Feeling
Behind Laughter and Humor. Amsterdam, Netherlands: John
Benjamins, 2007.
Chapman, Anthony, and Hugh Foot, eds. Its a Funny Thing, Humour.
Oxford, England: Pergamon Press, 1977.
Chapman, Anthony, and Hugh Foot, eds. Humor and Laughter: Theory,
Research, and Applications. Paperback: Edison, NJ: Transaction
Publishers, 1995.
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Nilsen, Don L. F., and Alleen Pace Nilsen. Language Play. Rowley, MA:
Newbury House, 1978.
Oring, Elliott. Jokes and Their Relations New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction
Publishers, 1992 (reissued, 2010).
Oring, Elliott. Engaging Humor. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press,
2003.
Oring, Elliott. Parsing the Joke: The General Theory of Verbal Humor and
Appropriate Incongruity. HUMOR: International Journal of Humor
Research 24.2 (2011): 203-222.
Oring, Elliott. Still Further Thoughts on Logical Mechanisms: A Response
to Christian F. Hempelmann and Salvatore Attardo. HUMOR:
International Journal of Humor Research. 24.2 (2011): 151-158.
Palmer, Jerry. Taking Humour Seriously. London, England: Routledge, 1994.
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