Embed
Email

humor literature

Document Sample
humor literature
Shared by: HC11111104567
Categories
Tags
Stats
views:
1
posted:
11/10/2011
language:
English
pages:
97
Literature and Humor









by Don L. F. Nilsen

and Alleen Pace Nilsen





54 1

Stephen King said:

“Fiction is the truth within the lie.”



What does this mean?



What is the difference between “truth” and

“verisimilitude”?



Does fiction (e.g. Red Badge of Courage) or

non-fiction (e.g. Stillness at Appomattox)

give a more accurate portrayal of the Civil

War?

54 2

ANALOGIES: GENRES AND SEASONS



• 1ST: SPRING = COMEDY



• 2ND: SUMMER = ROMANCE



• 3RD AUTUMN = TRAGEDY



• 4TH WINTER = IRONY or SATIRE



• THEN BACK TO SPRING = COMEDY

• (Frye 131-139)



54 3

SPRING









54 4

SUMMER









54 5

AUTUMN









54 6

WINTER









54 7

1ST: SPRING = COMEDY

• Comedy is based on an unjust law or

tradition which in the end is broken. There is

always a complication, but the comedy ends

in the reestablishment of the natural order of

things, and everybody paired off and living

happily ever after.



• Two sub-genres of Comedy are “Comedy of

Manners” and Comedy of Humors.”



54 8

COMEDY OF HUMORS

• The Comedy of Humors goes back to the

belief of medieval physiology that human

dispositions are based on the balance of the

four basic fluids, phlegm, blood, black bile,

and yellow bile.



• If the balance is not right a person might be

phlegmatic, sanguine, melancholy or bilious.

• (Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 248)



54 9

• If a character‟s humors are out of balance, he

is a “humors” character, otherwise known as

an “eccentric,” or even (as with Flannery

O‟Connor‟s characters) a “grotesque.”



• Chaucer‟s Canterbury Tales is filled with

humors characters “ranging from the

energetic Wife of Bath to the pretentious but

little educated Nun and from the overly

religious and hypocritical Monk to the crude

rascal of The Miller and the comically

romantic Knight.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008]: 248)



54 10

• In Neil Simon‟s The Odd Couple, Oscar

Madison‟s exaggerated sloppiness is

placed in opposition to the

meticulousness of Felix Unger.

• (Nilsen & Nilsen 107)



• In contrast, a Comedy of Manners

parodies and satirizes the manners and

conventions of high society.





54 11

Alazons and Eirons

• “Alazons and Eirons are stock humorous

characters going back to Greek drama.

Alazons are overly confident braggarts

getting their way by blustering and bullying.

At the other extreme, are the eirons, who are

sly rogues getting their way through feigned

ignorance or dumb luck.” The term “eiron”

is related to the term “irony,” because the

Eirons say one thing, but mean another.

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 248)

• Note that in Japanese culture, the Samurai

are the Alazons, and the Ninja are the Eirons.

54 12

Comedy of Manners

• “Comedies of manners

frequently stress the superior

intellectual and moral values of

middle class characters as

compared to the established

aristocracy.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 247)

54 13

• In Oscar Wilde‟s The Importance of Being

Earnest Jack responds to Lady Bracknell‟s

question of whether he smokes and she

answers, “I am glad to hear it. A man should

have an occupation of some kind.”



• Later, Jack answers one of her questions by

saying he doesn‟t know, to which she

cheerfully responds, “I am pleased to hear it.

I do not approve anything that tampers with

natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a

delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is

gone.” (Nilsens in Raskin [2008]: 248)



54 14

• In Beaumarchais‟s The Marriage of Figaro,

which was later made into an opera by

Mozart, the unjust law was that the Lord of

the Manor had the right to take the virginity

of any woman marrying one of the Lord‟s

serfs.



• The plot of the play revolves around how

Figaro and his bride repeatedly outwit the

Lord of the Manor until the couple is married

and the Lord is no longer entitled to this

privilege.

• (Nilsen & Nilsen 107)







54 15

• In Shakespeare‟s The Merchant of

Venice, the unjust law relates to the

pound of flesh that Shylock is authorized

to receive.



• Portia, the lawyer, overturns the unjust

law by arguing that while Shylock may

be allowed to take his pound of flesh, he

cannot shed one drop of blood in

obtaining it.

• (Nilsen & Nilsen 107)



54 16

COMEDY BECOMES

TRAGEDY

• The line which changes Shakespeare‟s

Romeo and Juliet from a comedy to a

tragedy was spoken by Mercutio (a

mercurial figure).



• When Mercutio is wounded in a sword

fight Romeo says, “Courage, man, the

hurt cannot be much,”

54 17

• and Mercutio responds, “No, „tis not so

deep as a well, nor so wide as a church-

door, but „tis enough, „twill serve.”



• “Ask for me to-morrow, and you shall

find me a grave man.”









54 18

ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES

• COMEDY OF HUMORS: Canterbury

Tales, Little Women, “The Owl and the

Nightingale,” The Taming of the Shrew



• COMEDY OF MANNERS: The

Importance of Being Ernest, The Rivals

(with Mrs. Malaprop)





54 19

2ND: SUMMER = ROMANCE

• The Romance “presents an idealized world, the

black-and-white world of our desires, where good

things are really good, and bad things are really bad.



• The Romance involves the Journey, and the Journey

involves the Hero, the Villain, the Quest, the Sage,

the Prohibition, the Sacrifice, the Dragon, the

Treasure, and sometimes the rescue of the Maiden.



• The epiphany (mountain top, tower, island,

lighthouse, ladder, staircase, Jack‟s beanstalk,

Rapunzel‟s hair, Indian rope trick etc.) connects

Heaven and Earth” (Frye 203).



54 20

EXAMPLES OF ROMANCE



• The Divine Comedy, The

Lion, the Witch and the

Wardrobe, Lord of the

Rings, Paradise Lost





54 21

3RD AUTUMN = TRAGEDY



• Tragedy is the opposite of

comedy in that the happiness

appears at the beginning or the

middle. Somebody is privileged,

but with a fatal flaw, usually an

obsession and hubris which

causes the downfall.

54 22

EXAMPLES OF TRAGEDY



•The Great Gatsby,

Hamlet, King Lear,

Macbeth, Othello,

Romeo and Juliet

54 23

4TH WINTER = SATIRE



• “Satire demands at least a

token fantasy (Utopia and

Dystopia), a content which

the reader recognizes as

grotesque, and at least an

implicit moral standard”

(Frye 224). 54 24

EXAMPLES OF SATIRE

• HORATIAN SATIRE (mild and

amusing): Animal Farm, Brave New

World, Gulliver‟s Travels, Little Big

Man, Lysistrata, Screwtape Letters



• JUVENALIAN SATIRE (harsh and

bitter): 1984, Clockwork Orange,

Fahrenheit 451, Lord of the Flies, A

Modest Proposal

54 25

4TH WINTER = IRONY



• “Whenever a reader is not

sure what the author‟s

attitude is or what his own is

supposed to be, we have

irony with relatively little

satire” (Frye 223).

54 26

EXAMPLES OF IRONY

OR GALLOWS HUMOR

• Catch 22, Catcher in the

Rye, Fargo, The Loved One,

One Flew Over the Cuckoo‟s

Nest, Portnoy‟s Complaint,

Pulp Fiction,

Slaughterhouse 5, The

World According to Garp

54 27

ADDITIONAL GENRES

• Other genres of literature include the

following:

• Benign Humor, the Bildungsroman, the

Cautionary Tale, the Doppelganger

Genre, Erotic Humor, Fantasy Humor,

Farce, Gothic Humor, the

Metamorphosis Genre, Parody, the

Picaresque Novel, Pourquoi Stories,

and Vernacular Humor

54 28

BENIGN HUMOR

• Benign Humor is non-threatening. It is a mild

type of satire with much word play.



• Examples of Benign Humor include Alice in

Wonderland, the Bertie Wooster and Jeeves

novels, Peter Rabbit, Through the Looking

Glass, The Wind and the Willows, and Winnie

the Pooh.





54 29

Lewis Carroll

• After the success of Lewis Carroll‟s

Alice in Wonderland, and Through the

Looking Glass, Queen Victoria gave

permission to Lewis Carroll to dedicate

his next book to her.



• He complied by honoring her with a

mathematical treatise.

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008]: 244)

54 30

BILDUNGSROMAN



• In a Bildungsroman, the character

grows.



• Examples of Bildungsroman novels

include Are You There, God? It‟s Me,

Margaret, The Chocolate War, I Am the

Cheese, and Moll Flanders.





54 31

CAUTIONARY TALE



• A Cautionary Tale tells us what not to

do.



• Examples of Cautionary Tales include

Aesop‟s Fables, The Bidpai Tales,

Coyote Stories, La Fontaine‟s Fables,

Uncle Remus Stories and Urban

Legends.

54 32

DOPPELGANGER GENRE

• The Doppelganger Genre concentrates on a

single character with two personalities, or

two characters with a single personality.



• Examples of the Doppelganger Genre include

Dr. Jeckle and Mr. Hyde, Pride and Prejudice,

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead,

Sense and Sensibility, and “Tweedledum and

Tweedledee.”



54 33

Erotic Literature



• Erotic literature is sexy, and it is

usually humorous.



• Examples of Erotic Humor include Fear

of Flying, Leaves of Grass, Lolita, and

Tom Jones,



• …and others too numerous to mention.

54 34

Ethnic Literature

Henry Louis Gates, and Signifying

• In his 1988 The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of

African American Literary Criticism, Henry Louis

Gates, Jr. says that because African American

slaves were denied the use of normal and private

communication, they developed double-entendre

Trickster signifiers.



• “Speakers would say something that meant one

thing to whites and another to blacks. The humor

comes from the realization that simultaneous

messages are being communicated and that the

authority figures (usually whites) understand only

one message while the other participants

comprehend both” (Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 258).



54 35

Vine Deloria

• The title of Vine Deloria‟s Custer Died for

Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto is an example

of a pan-Indian joke (especially meaningful

only to tribal or family members).



• Another example of a pan-Indian joke says

that when the missionaries came, they had

only the Bible, while the Indians had all the

land. But now, “They have all the land, and

Indians have only the Bible.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008]: 258)



54 36

Fantasy Humor



• Fantasy Humor requires a special

suspension of disbelief, and includes the

genre of Science Fiction.



• Examples of Fantasy Humor include

Hitchhiker‟s Guide to the Galaxy, The Legend

of Sleepy Hollow, The Jungle Book, A

Midsummer Night‟s Dream, Peter Pan, The

Adventures of Walter Mitty, and The Wizard

of Oz.

54 37

Farce: A Violent but Innocent Genre



• Jessica Milner Davis says that “whether it be

English, medieval Dutch, Spanish, French,

Viennese, Russian, improvised commedia

dell‟arte, or even Japanese kyògen of nò

theatre, farce is both the most violent and

physically shocking of dramatic forms of

comedy…, but it is almost the most innocent

in that unlike satire or burlesque it does not

offend either individuals or society.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 264)

54 38

• Davis continues, “Equally

paradoxically, farce is not particularly

fantastic or unrealistic: indeed in terms

of acting style, actors assert that the

truthfulness-to-life of their character is

absolutely essential for the release of

laughter by the audience.”



• But the violence is highly stylized with

“precision of timing and intonation

notoriously difficult to achieve.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 264)

54 39

GOTHIC HUMOR



• Gothic Humor occurs in haunted houses or

in mysterious caves. It is a dark and stormy

night, and many of the sights and sounds are

mysterious and threatening.



• Examples of Gothic Humor include Dracula,

Frankenstein, The House of Usher,

Northanger Abbey, The Langaliers, and

Wuthering Heights.



54 40

• Paul Lewis studied the role of gothic

narratives, and was “struck by the range of

possible responses including puzzlement,

fear, and humor and by the relation between

these responses and gothic sub-genres

including didactic gothic, speculative or

ambiguous gothic, and mock-gothic.”



• Lewis argued that “the eruption of fearful

mysteries in a narrative is an essential

generic element of the gothic.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 265)

54 41

Comedy vs. Tragedy

High Comedy and Low Comedy

• In the classical sense, the “comedy” isn‟t

necessarily funny, but in contrast to the

“tragedy” the “comedy” has a happy ending.



• “High comedy (what we now call „smart

comedy‟ or „literary comedy‟) relies for its

humor on wit and sophistication, while low

comedy relies on burlesque, crude jokes,

and buffoonery.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 246)



54 42

Phunny Phellows vs. Satirists

Masks and Voices

• Daniel Royot said that comedians don masks and

borrow voices, and “it is the interplay of such

conflicting masks and voices that results in open or

subtle incongruities. With only masks, the effect

would be simply parodic, grotesque humor as is

unfortunately too much of Jerry Lewis‟s stuff and

that of other “phunny phellows.” On the other hand,

if they use just voices without masks, the result is

merely satirical.”

• Royot then contrasts the visual humor of Mel Brooks

with the satirical humor of Woody Allen.

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 260)



54 43

Joe Sandwich and a Unified Theory of Humor



• In The Vale of Laughter, Peter De Vries has a

character named Joe Sandwich who says,



• “No single theory has yet managed to

explain all varieties of mirth. Nine tenths of

what we laugh at answers to Bergson,

another nine tenths to Freud, still another to

Kant or Plato, and so on, leaving always that

elusive tenth that makes each definition like

a woman trying to pack more into a girdle

than it will legitimately hold.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 261)

54 44

Laughter and Literature

• In correlating laughter with screen comedians,

James Agee concluded that “four of the main grades

of laughter are the titter, the yowl, the belly laugh,

and the buffo…, which he organized into six

categories ranging from the incipient or „inner and

inaudible‟ laugh (the simper and smirk) to the loud

and unrestrained howl, yowl, shriek, and Olympian

laugh.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 260)







54 45

• “Agee‟s study demonstrates an

interesting crossover between

literature and real-life because

in a way it is measuring the

care and the skill with which

authors observe and record

people‟s actions.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 260)



54 46

METAMORPHOSIS HUMOR

• Metamorphosis Humor always results

in a miraculous transformation.



• Examples of Metamorphosis Humor

include Faust, The Metamorphosis, My

Fair Lady, Pinnochio, and Pygmalion.







54 47

PARODY

• Parody mimics and exaggerates the

style of the original.



• Examples of Parody include Byron‟s

Don Juan, Fables for our Times,

“Humpty Dumpty à la Poe,” The Rape

of the Lock and Lewis Carroll‟s

“Twinkle Twinkle, Little Bat.”

54 48

Mark Twain and Doggerel Poetry

• Julia Moore‟s „death‟ poetry of the mid-1800s

is an example of doggerel poetry. “In

Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain modeled his

“Ode to Stephen Bots, Dec‟d” on her work.



• Twain described her as having a rare

“organic talent” for humor. She could make

“an intentionally humorous episode pathetic

and an intentionally pathetic one funny.”

(Nilsens in Raskin 261-262)



54 49

THE PICARESQUE NOVEL

• A Picaresque Novel is a mock quest done by

a Picaro who doesn‟t have any money,

power, or prestige. This Picaro lives by his

wits as he encounters various powerful

eccentrics in his episodic adventures.



• Examples of Picaresque Novels include Don

Quixote, Huckleberry Finn, and Pickwick

Papers.



54 50

There are six qualities that are associated with

the picaresque novel:



1. “The first-person account tells a part or the

whole life of a rogue or picaro.



2. Rogues and picaros are drawn from a lower

social level, are of loose character, and if

employed, do menial labor and live by their

wit and playful language.



3. Picaresque novels are episodic in nature.



54 51

4. Picaresque characters do not mature or

develop.



5. The story is realistic. The language is plain

(vernacular) and is filled with vivid detail.



6. Picaresque characters serve other higher

class characters and learn their foibles and

frailties, thus providing opportunities to

satirize social castes, national types, and/or

racial peculiarities.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 253)

54 52

POURQUOI STORIES

• Pourquoi Stories explain how the world

works.



• Examples of Pourquoi Stories include

the Anansi Tales from Africa, and the

Paul Bunyan and Pecos Bill stories

from the United States.





54 53

VERNACULAR HUMOR

• Vernacular Humor is written the way people

actually talk, using colloquial language, and

eye dialect, such as “iz” and “wuz.”



• Examples of Vernacular Humor include

Innocents Abroad, A Tramp Abroad, and

anything written by Mark Twain or Charles

Dickens, but nothing written by James

Fennimore Cooper.



54 54

!Women‟s Humor

Regina Barreca

Some of the titles of Regina Barreca‟s books

show how teasing occurs between the sexes:



They Used to Call Me Snow White, But I Drifted



Perfect Husbands: and Other Fairy Tales



Untamed and Unabashed: Essays on Women

and Humor in British Literature



54 55

• !Regina Barreca said, “Women‟s lives have

always been filled with humor. It emerged

“as a tool for survival in the social and

professional jungles” and works as a

“weapon against the absurdities of injustice.”



• “Women did not suddenly get funny in the

1990s any more than women suddenly got

ambitious in the 1970s or sexually aware in

the 1960s or intelligent in the 1980s.”

(Nilsen in [Raskin] 2008: 259)





54 56

!!Wendy Wasserstein

• Wendy Wasserstein said,



• “When I speak up, it‟s not because I

have any particular answers; rather, I

have a desire to puncture the

pretentiousness of those who seem so

certain they do.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008] 259)

54 57

!!!E. B. and Katherine White

The Nature of Humor

• “Humor can be dissected, as a frog can, but

the thing dies in the process and the innards

are discouraging to any but the scientific

mind.”



• “Humor won‟t stand much blowing up, and it

won‟t stand much poking. It has a certain

fragility, and evasiveness, which one had

best respect. Essentially it is a complete

mystery.”

(Nilsens in Raskin [2008]: 243)



54 58

!!AMERICAN LITERATURE WEB SITES I

AMERICAN HUMOR STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF MLA (DAVID SLOANE):

http://www.newhaven.edu/UNH/Special/AHSA/AHSAHomePage.htm



SANDRA CISNEROS:

http://www.sandracisneros.com/flash/books/books_05_front.html



JACK GANTOS:

http://www.jackgantos.com/jackgantos_print.html



LIT TRIPS ON GOOGLE EARTH:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPiiAqXKy3g&faeture=related



LOST:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cZy8SGLkQk



PHILIP ROTH SOCIETY (DEREK ROYAL)

http://rothsociety.org





54 59

J. K. ROWLING:

http://www.jkrowling.com/



LEMONY SNICKET:

http://www.lemonysnicket.com/VileVideos/video1.html



ART SPIEGELMAN:

http://lambiek.net/artists/s/spiegelman.htm



TROPING:

http://www.tvtropes.org



YA-LIT WEB QUESTS:

http://www.asu.edu/clas/english/englished/yalit/webquest.htm









54 60

Related PowerPoints

• Gallows Humor



• Irony



• Paradox



• Parody



• Poetry



• Satire





54 61

References:



Altschuler, Glenn C., and Patrick M. Burns. “Snarlin‟ Carlin: The Odyssey

of a Libertarian.” Studies in American Humor 3.2 (2009): 42-57.



Ammons, Elizabeth, and Annette White-Park. Tricksterism in Turn-of-the

Century American Literature. Hanover, NY: Tufts University Press,

1994.



Antonopoulou, Eleni. “A Cognitive Approach to Literary Humour

Devices: Translating Raymond Chandler,” in Vandaele, 235-257.



Attardo, Salvatore. “Humor and Irony in Interaction: From Mode

Adoption to Failure of Detection.” in Say Not to Say: New

Perspectives on Miscommunication Eds. Luigi Anolli, Rita Ciceri, and

Giuseppe Riva. Amsterdam, Netherlands: IOS Press, 2002, 159-179.



Attardo, Salvatore. “Irony as Relevant Inappropriateness.” Journal of

Pragmatics 32 (2000): 793-826.



Attardo, Salvatore. “Irony Markers and Functions: Towards a Goal-

Oriented Theory of Irony and Its Processing, in Rask 12 (2000): 3-20.



54 62

Baker, Russell. Russell Baker‟s Book of American Humor. New York, NY: W.

W. Norton, 1993.



Barber, C. L. Shakespeare‟s Festive Comedy: A Study of Dramatic Form and

Its Relation in Social Custom. Cleveland, OH: Meridian Books, 1966.



Barreca, Regina. They Used to Call Me Snow White, But I Drifted. New York,

NY: Viking, 1991.



Barreca, Regina. Perfect Husbands: and Other Fairy Tales. New York, NY:

Harmony Books, 1993.



Barreca, Regina. Untamed and Unabashed: Essays on Women and Humor in

British Literature. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 1994.



Barreca, Regina. The Penguin Book of Women‟s Humor. New York, NY:

Penguin, 1996.



Barreca, Regina, ed. Last Laughs: Perspectives on Women and Comedy.

New York, NY: New York, NY: Gordon and Breach, 1988.







54 63

Barreca, Regina, ed. New Perspectives on Women and Comedy. Philadelphia,

PA: Gordon and Breach, 1992.



Bennett, Barbara. Comic Visions, Female Voices: Contemporary Women

Novelists and Southern Humor. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State

University Press, 1998.



Benston, Alice N. “Portia, the Law, and the Tripartite Structure of The

Merchant of Venice.” Shakespaere Quarterly 30.3 (1979): 367-385.



Berkove, Lawrence. “Twain‟s Rhetorical Bag of Tricks.” Studies in American

Humor NS3.22 (2010): 27-42.



Bier, Jesse. The Rise and Fall of American Humor. New York, NY: Holt,

Rinehart and Winston, 1968.



Bird, John. “Mark Twain: Citizen of the World.” Studies in American Humor

3.2 (2009): 85-97.



Birden, Lorene M. “Frank and Unconscious Humor and Narrative Structure in

Anne Brontë‟s The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.” HUMOR: International Journal

of Humor Research 24.3 (2011): 263-286.



54 64

Blair, Walter. Davy Crocket: Legendary Frontier Hero: His True Life Story and

the Fabulous Tall Tales Told about Him. Springfield, IL: Lincoln-Herndon

Press, 1986.



Blair, Walter. Horse Sense in American Humor from Benjamin Franklin to

Ogden Nash. New York, NY: Russell and Russell, 1942.



Blair, Walter. Native American Humor 1800-1900. New York, NY: American

Book Company, 1937.



Blair, Walter, with Hamlin Hill. America‟s Humor: From Poor Richard to

Doonesbury. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1978.



Blair, Walter, with Raven McDavid Jr. The Mirth of a Nation: America‟s Great

Dialect Humor. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1983.



Blake, Ann. “The Comedy of Othello.” The Critical Review 15 (1972): 46-51.



Blasingame, James. “The Graveyard Book.” English Journal 99.2 (2009): 83-

84.







54 65

Blount, Roy, ed. Roy Blount‟s Book of Southern Humor. New York, NY: W. W.

Norton, 1994.



Boatright, Mody C. Folk Laughter on the American Frontier. New York, NY:

Macmillan, 1994. Botkin, B. A. A Treasury of American Folklore. New York, NY:

Crown Publishers, 1944.



Bruns, John. Loopholes: Reading Comically. Edison, NJ: Transaction, 2009.



Brunvand, Jan Harold. “A Classification for Shaggy Dog Stories.” The Journal of

American Folklore January, 1963, 42-68.



Bryant, Gregory A., and Jean E. Fox Tree. “Is There an Ironic Tone of Voice?”

Language and Speech 48 (2005): 257-277.



Bryant, J. A. Shakespeare and the Uses of Comedy. Lexington, KY: The University

of Kentucky, 1986.









54 66

Budd, Louis J., and Edwin H. Cady, eds. The Best from American Literature.

Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1992.



Campbell, Oscar James. Shakespeare‟s Satire. London, England: Oxford

University Press, 1943.



Camfield, Gregg. Necessary Madness: The Humor of Domesticity in

Nineteenth-Century American Literature. New York, NY: Oxford

University Press, 1997.



Camfield, Gregg. Sentimental Twain: Samuel Clemens in the Maze of Moral

Philosophy. Philadelplhia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1994.



Carlson, Richard S. The Benign Humorists. New York, NY: Archon, 1975.









54 67

Caron, James E. “Why „Literary Comedians‟ Mislabels Two Comic Writers,

George Derby („John Phoenix‟) and Sam Clemens („Mark Twain‟).”

Studies in American Humor NS 3.22 (2010): 43-68.



Cerf, Bennet, ed. An Encyclopedia of Modern American Humor. Garden City,

NY: Doubleday, 1954.



Charney, Maurice, ed. Comedy: A Geographic and Historical Guide, Volumes

I and II. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2005.



Clark, William Bedford, and W. Craig Turner. Critical Essays on American

Humor. Boston, MA: G. K. Hall, 1984.



Coats, Karen. “Between Horror, Humour, and Hope: Neil Gaiman and the

Psychic Work of the Gothic.” The Gothic in Children‟s Literature:

Haunting the Borders. Ed. Anna Jackson, Karen Coats, and Roderick

McGillis. New York, NY: 2008, 77-92.



Cohen, Sarah Blacher. Comic Relief: Humor in Contemporary American

Literature. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 1978.







54 68

Cohen, Sarah Blacher. Jewish Wry: Essays on Jewish Humor. Detroit, MI:

Wayne State University Press, 1987.



Colston, Herbert. “Contrast and Assimilation in Verbal Irony.” Journal of

Pragmatics 34.2 (2002): 111-142.



Colston, Herbert, and J. O‟Brien. “Contrast and Pragmatics in Figurative

Language: Anything Understatement can do, Irony can do Better.”

Journal of Pragmatics 32.11 (2000): 1557-1583.



Conroy, Terry, and David E. E. Sloane. “A True Story „Confirmed‟: „How a

Slave Mother Found Her Son‟” Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010):

147-154.



Corrigan, Robert W., ed. Comedy: Meaning and Form. San Francisco, CA:

Chandler Publishing, 1965.



Courtney, Steve. “Hartford‟s Elia.” Studies in American Humor NS3.22

(2010): 115-129.









54 69

Cowan, Louise. The Terrain of Comedy Dallas, TX: Dallas Institute of

Humanities and Culture, 1984.



Cox, James. Mark Twain: The Fate of Humor. Princeton, NJ: Princeton

University Press, 1966.



Culler, Jonathan, ed. On Puns: The Foundation of Letters. New York, NY:

Blackwell, 1988.



Curcò, Carmen. “Irony, Negation, Echo and Metarepresentation.” Lingua

100.4 (2000: 257-280.



Daemmrich, Ingrid G. “The Cyclical Seasons of Humor in Literature.”

HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 3-4 (1990): 415-134.



Daniell, David. “Shakespeare and the Traditions of Comedy.” The

Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare Studies. Ed. Stanley Wells.

Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1986.



54 70

Davis, Jessica Milner. Farce. London, England: Transaction Publishers,

2005.



Davis, Jessica Milner. Farce: Rebellion, Revenge and Realpolitik. Edison,

NJ: Transaction Books, 2002.



Davis, Jessica Milner. “Kyògen as Comic Relief: The Structure, Style and

Comic Typology of Classical Kyògen Plays from the Isumi and Ókura

Schools.” Australian Journal of Comedy 7.1 (2001).



Deloria, Vine, Jr. Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto. Norman,

OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988.



Denvir, John. “William Shakespare and the Jurisprudence of Comedy.”

Stanford Law Review 39.4 (1987): 825-849.









54 71

Drennan, Robert E., ed. The Algonquin Wits: A Crackling Collection of Bons

Mots, Wisecracks, Epigrams, and Gags. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press,

1983.



Dudden, Arthur. American Humor. New York, NY: Oxford University Pres,

1987.



Eisterhold, Jodi, Salvatore Attardo, and Diana Boxer. “Reactions to Irony in

Discourse: Evidence for the Least Disruption Principle.” Journal of

Pragmatics 38.8 (2006): 1239-1256.



Falk, Robert. American Literature in Parody: A Collection of Parody, Satire,

and Literary Burlesque of American Writers Past and Present. New York,

NY: Twayne, 1955.



Feinberg, Leonard. Introduction to Satire. Ames, IA: The Iowa State

University Press, 2nd Edition. Santa Fe, NM: Pilgrims Process, 2008.



Feinberg, Leonard. The Satirist. Ames, IA: The Iowa State University Press,

1964.



Finney, Gail, ed. Look Who‟s Laughing: Gender and Comedy. Langhorne,

PA: Gordon and Breach, 1994.



54 72

Flashner, Graham. Fun with Woody: The Complete Woody Allen Quiz Book. New

York, NY: Holt, 1987.



Flescher, Jacqueline. “The Language of Nonsense in Alice.” Yale French Studies 43

(1969): 128-144.



Fletcher, M. D. Contemporary Political Satire: Narrative Strategies in the Post-

Modern Context. New York, NY: University Press of America, 1987.



Foakes, R. A. Voices of Maturity in Shakespeare‟s Comedies. London, England,

1972.



Folgado, Vicente López . “ „A Musical Comedy without Music.‟: P. G. Wodehouse‟s

Sense of Humour. Dimensions of Humor: Explorations in Lilnguistics, Literature,

Cultural Studies and Translation. Ed. Carmen Valero-Garcés. València, Spain:

Universitat de València, 2010, 55-78.



Fowkes, Katherine A. “From Gender to Genre: Blake Edwards‟ Rollercoaster of

Comedy.” Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 191-200.



Fowler, Dorreen, and Ann J. Abadie, eds. Faulkner and Humor. Jackson, MS:

University Press of Mississippi, 1986.









54 73

Friedman, Bruce J., ed. Black Humor. New York, NY: Bantam, 1965.



Frye, Northrop. “The Argument of Comedy.” English Institute Essays. Ed. D.

A. Robertson. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1949.



Frye, Northrop. Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays. Princeton, NJ:

Princeton University Press, 1957.



Gale, Stephen. Encyclopedia of American Humorists. New York, NY:

Garland, 1988.



Gale, Stephen. Encyclopedia of British Humorists. New York, NY: Garland,

1994.



Galiñanes, Cristina Larkin. “Relevance Theory, Humour and the Narrative

Structure of Humorous Novels.” Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses

13 (2000): 95-106.



Galiñanes, Cristina Larkin, “Funny Fiction: Or, Jokes and Their Relation to

the Humorous Novel.” Poetics Today 26.1 (2005): 79-111.







54 74

Galligan, E. The Comic Vision in Literature. Athens, GA: University of

Georgia Press, 1984.



Galloway, David. The Absurd Hero in American Fiction: Updike, Styron,

Bellow, Sallinger, 2nd Edition. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1981.



Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of African

American Literary Criticism. New York, NY: Oxford University Press,

1988.



Geismar, Maxwell. Ring Lardner and the Portrait of Folly. New York, NY:

Thomas Y. Crowell, 1972.



Gibbs, Raymond W. “Irony in Talk among Friends.” Metaphor and Symbol 15

(2000): 5-27.



Gibbs, Raymond W., and Herbert L. Colston, eds. Irony in Language and

Thought. New York, NY: Lawrence Earlbaum, 2007.



Grauer, Neil A. Remember Laughter: A Life of James Thurber. Lincoln, NE:

University of Nebraska Press, 1995.





54 75

Grawe, Paul H. Comedy in Space, Time and the Imagination. Chicago, IL:

Nelson-Hall, 1983.



Graybill, Mark S. “Faulkner‟s Self-Reflexive Humor.” Studies in American

Humor New Series 3.23 (2011): 7-29.



Gurewitch, Morton. The Ironic Temper and the Comic Imagination. Detroit,

MI: Wayne State University Press, 1994.



Hans, Julia. “‟Landy Goshen! Here comes a whole troop „them city boarders‟:

May Isabel Fisk and the Art of the Comic Monologue.” Studies in

American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 129-146.



Harris, Charles B. Contemporary American Novelists of the Absurd. New

Haven, CT: College and University Press, 1971.



Hayden, Bradley. “In Memoriam Humor: Julia Moore and the Western

Michigan Poets.” English Journal 72.5 (1983): 22-28.



Hill, Hamliln, and Walter Blair. America‟s Humor: from Poor Richard to

Doonesbury. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1978.



Hogan, Walter. Humor in Young Adult Literature: A Time to Laugh. Lanham,

MD: Scarecrow Press, 2005.

54 76

Hudson, Barbara. “Sociolinguistic Analysis of Dialogues and First-Person

Narratives in Fiction,” in Language: Readings in Language and Culture,

6th Edition. Eds. Virginia Clark, Paul Eschholz, and Alfred Rosa. New

York, NY: St. Martin‟s Press, 1998, 740-748.



Hunt, Leigh. Wit and Humour. London, England: Smith, Elder and Col,

1846.



Hutcheon, Linda. A Theory of Parody: The Teachings of Twentieth-Century

Art Forms. New York, NY: Methuen, 1985.



Hynes, William J., and William G. Doty, eds. Mythical Trickster Figures:

Contours, Contexts, and Criticisms. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of

Alabama Press, 1993.



Inge, M. Thomas. The Frontier Humorists: Critical Views. New York, NY:

Archon, 1975.



Inge, M. Thomas. “One Universal Priceless Trait: American Humor.”

American Studies International 25.1 (1987): 28-45.









54 77

Inge, M. Thomas. Perspectives on American Culture: Essays on Humor,

Literature, and the Popular Arts. Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill Press, 1994.



Inge, M. Thomas, and Ed Piacentino, eds. Southern Frontier Humor: An

Anthology. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2010.



Johansen, Ruthann Knechel. The Narrative Secret of Flannery O‟Connor:

The Trickster as Interpreter. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame,

1994.



Jurich, Marilyn. Sheherazade‟s Sisters: Trickster Heroines and Their Stories

in World Literature. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.



Kehl, Del G. “Thalia Pops Her Girdle: Humor in the Novels of Peter De Vries.”

Studies in American Humor. February, 1983: 184-189.



Kehl, Del G. “Humor of the New Southwest in the Fiction of Larry McMurtry.”

Southwestern American Literature Spring, 1989: 20-32.



Kehl, Del G. “Varieties of Risible Experience: Grades of Laughter and their

Function in Modern American Literature.” HUMOR: International Journal

of Humor Research 13.4 (2000): 379-394.





54 78

Kehl, Del G. “Thalia Does the Charleston: Humor in the Fiction of F.

Scott Fitzgerald.” in F. Scott Fitzgerald in the Twenty-first Century

Eds. Jackson R. Bryer, Ruth Prigozy, and Milton R. Stern.

Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 2003, 202-222.



Kelly, Fred C. George Ade: Warmhearted Satirist. Indianapolis, IN:

Bobbs-Merrill, 1947.



Keough, William. Punchlines: The Violence of American Humor. New

York, NY: Paragon House, 1966.



Kharpertian, Theodore D. A Hand to Turn the Time: The Menippean

Satires of Thomas Pynchon. London, England: Associated

University Press, 1990.



Kiley, Frederick, and J. M. Shuttleworth, eds. Satire: From Aesop to

Buchwald. New York, NY: Odyssey/Bobbs-Merrill, 1971.









54 79

Kiley, Frederick, and Walter McDonald. A Catch-22 Casebook. New York,

NY: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1973.



Kingsbury, Melilnda Spencer. “Kate‟s Forward Humor: Historicizing Affect

in The Taming of the Shrew.” South Atlantic Review 69.1 (2004): 61-84.



Kotthoff, Helga. “Responding to Irony in Different Contexts: On Cognition

in Conversation.” Journal of Pragmatics 35 (2003): 1387-1411.



Larkin Galiñanes, Cristina. “How to Tackle Humour in Literary Narratives.”

in Dimensions of Humor: Exlorations in Linguistics, Literature, Cultural

Studies and Translation. Ed. Carmen Valero Garcés. València, Spain:

Universitat de València, 2010, 199-224.



Leacock, Stephen, ed. The Greatest Pages of American Humor. New York,

NY: Doubleday, 1936.



Leacock, Stephen, ed. Humor and Humanitiy. New York, NY: Henry Holt,

1938.



Lee, Judith Yaross. “The Year‟s Work in American Humor Studies, 2009.”

Studies in American Humor New Series 3.23 (2011): 81-112.



54 80

Levin, Harry, ed. Veins of Humor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,

1972.



Levy, Barbara. Ladies Laughing: Wit as Control in Contemporary American

Women. New York, NY: Gordon and Breach, 1997.



Lewis, Paul. Comic Effects: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Humor and

Literature. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1989.



Lewis, Paul. “Mysterious Laughter: Humor and Fear in Gothic Fiction.” Genre

14 (1981): 309-327.



Lewis, Paul. “Poe‟s Humor: A Psychological Analysis.” Studies in Short

Fiction 27 (1989): 531-546.



López Folgado, Vicente. “A Musical Comedy without Music: P. G.

Wodehouse‟s Sense of Humour.” in Dimensions of Humor: Exlorations in

Linguistics, Literature, Cultural Studies and Translation. Ed. Carmen

Valero Garcés. València, Spain: Universitat de València, 2010, 53-76.



Lynn, Kenneth, ed. The Comic Tradition in America: An Anthology of

American Humor. New York, NY: Norton, 1968.



54 81

Lynn, Kenneth. Mark Twain and Southwestern Humor. Westport, CT:

Greenwood Press, 1959.



MacDonald, Dwight, ed. Parodies: An Anthology from Chaucer to

Beerbohm—And After. New York, NY: Random House, 1960.



McAndrews, Kristin M. Wrangling Women: Humor and Gender in the

American West. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press, 2006.



McIntire-Strasburg, Janice. “‟Sivilizing Humor‟: The Evolution of Mark

Twain‟s Library of Humor.” Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 11-

26.



Martin, Gretchen. “Staging Southern Manhood: Masquerade Culture and the

Masks of Masculinity.” Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 179-

184.



Matthews, Charles. “Satire in the Alice Books.” Criticism 12 (1970): 105-119.



Meredith, George. “An Essay on Comedy.” in Comedy Ed. Wylie Sypher.

Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 3-60.





54 82

Mey, Jacob. Pragmatics: An Introduction, 2nd Edition. Malden, MA:

Blackwell, 2001.



Mintz, Lawrence E., ed. Humor in America: A Research Guide to Genres and

Topics. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1988.



Muir, Frank. Oxford Book of Humorous Prose: From William Caxton to P. G.

Wodehouse, A Conducted Tour by Frank Muir. New York, NY: Oxford

University Press, 1990.



Nickels, Cameron C. Civil War Humor. Jackson, MS: University Press of

Mississippi, 2010.



Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. Encyclopedia of 20th Century

American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood/Oryx Press, 2000.



Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen.“Irony.” Comedy: A Geographic

and Historical Guide (Co-Author: Alleen Pace Nilsen). Ed. Maurice

Charney. Westport, CT: Praeger/Greenwood Press, 2005, 394-409.



Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. “Literature and Humor” in Raskin

243-280.



54 83

Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. “Names for Fun: M. E. Kerr, Gary

Paulsen, Louis Sachar, and Polly Horvath.” in Names and Naming in

Young Adult Literature. Eds. Alleen and Don Nilsen. Lanham, MD:

Scarecrow Press, 2007, 1-22.



Nilsen, Don L. F. “The Graveyard Book.” The Journal of Adolescent and

Adult Literacy 53.1 (2009): 79-80.



Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in American Literature: A Selected Annotated

Bibliography. New York, NY: Garland, 1992.



Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in British Literature from the Middle Ages to the

Restoration: A Reference Guide. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997.



Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century British

Literature: A Reference Guide. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.



Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in Irish Literature: A Reference Guide. Westport, CT:

Greenwood Press, 1996.



Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in Twentieth-Century British Literature: A Reference

Guide. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2000.



54 84

Novak, William, and Moshe Waldoks, eds. The Big Book of Jewish Humor.

New York, NY: Harper and Row, 1981.



Novak, William, and Moshe Waldoks, eds. The Big Book of New American

Humor: The Best of the Past 25 Years. New York, NY: Harper Perennial,

1990.



Olsen, Lance. Circus of the Mind in Motion: Postmodernism and the Comic

Vision. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 1990.



Perret, Marion D. “Petruchio: The Model Wife.” Studies in English Literature,

1500-1900 23.2 (1983): 223-235.



Piacentino, Ed. “Editor‟s Note.” Studies in American Humor New Series 3.23

(2011): 5-7.









54 85

Piacentino, Ed. “Two Perspectives on Racial Oppression: Doesticks and

Mark Twain.” Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 69-90.



Pifano, Diana. “Igor Delgado Senior‟s “Epopeya Malandra”: A Study of

Parody and Humor in Literature.” in Dimensions of Humor: Exlorations in

Linguistics, Literature, Cultural Studies and Translation. Ed. Carmen

Valero Garcés. València, Spain: Universitat de València, 2010, 225-244.



Pinsker, Sanford. “The Graying of Black Humor.” Studies in the 20th

Century 9 (1972): 15-33.



Pollard, Arthur. Satire. London, England: Methuen, 1970.



Praeger, Charles. 20th-Century Humor. New York, NY: Viking Press, 1978.









54 86

Pratt, Alan R., ed. Black Humor: Critical Essays. New York, NY: Garland,

1993.



Pughe, Thomas. Comic Sense: Reading Robert Coover, Stanley Elkin, Philip

Roth. Basel: Birkhauser Verlag, 1994.



Raskin, Victor, ed. Primer of Humor Research. New York, NY: Mouton de

Gruyter, 2008.



Raskin, Victor. Semantic Mechanisms of Humor. Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 1985.



Redfern, Walter. Puns. New York, NY: Blackwell, 1984.



Richler, Mordecai, ed. The Best of Modern Humor. New York, NY: Alfred A.

Knopf, 1983.









54 87

Rohman, Chad. “Mark Twain‟s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur‟s

Court: Serio-Comic and Carnival Prospects Unfulfilled.” Studies in

American Humor 3.2 (2009): 21-41.



Romine, Scott. “Recovering C. M. Haile, Antebellum Humorist.” Studies in

American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 185-190.



Rozett, Martha Tuck. “Othello, and the Comic Tradition.” Bulletin of

Research in the Humanities 85 (1982): 386-411.



Rourke, Constance. American Humor: A Study of the National Character.

Tallahassee, FL: Florida State University Press, 1931.



Royot, Daniel. “How the West was Spoofed: Manifest Rascality and Revels

with a Cause, From Yankee Homorists to Literary Comedians.” Studies

in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 155-178.



Royot, Daniel. L‟Humour Américan: Des Puritains aux Yankees. Lyon,

France: Presses Universitaires de Lyon, 1980.



Rubin, Louis D., Jr., ed. The Comic Imagination in American Literature. New

Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1983.



54 88

Ruiz Moneva, Angeles. “Irony in Relevance Theory: Recurrent Features,

Critical Stances and Possible Trends.” The Atlantic Literary Review 2.1

(2001): 161-189.



Safer, Elaine B. The Contemporary American Comic Epic: The Novels of

Barth, Pynchon, Gaddis, and Kesey. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University

Press, 1988.



Safer, Elaine B. Mocking the Age: The Later Novels of Philip Roth. New

York, NY: State University of New York Press, 2006.



Schmitz, Neil. Of Huck and Alice: Humorous Writing in American Literature.

Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1983.



Schulz, Max F. Black Humor Fiction of the Sixties. Athens, OH: Ohio

University Press, 1973.



Schuster, Charles. “Mikhail Bakhtin as Rhetorical Theorist.” Landmark

Essays on Bakhtin, Rhetoric, and Writing, Ed. Frank Farmer. Mahway,

NJ: Hermaoras Press, 1998, 1-12.







54 89

Schwoebel, J., S. Dews, E. Winner, and K. Srinivas. “Obligatory

Processing of the Literal Meaning of Ironic Utterances: Further

Evidence.” Metaphor and Symbol 15 (2000): 47-61.



Shalit, Gene. Laughing Matters: A Celebration of American Humor.

New York, NY: Doubleday, 1987.



Shelley, Cameron. “The Bicoherence Theory of Situational Irony.” Cognitive

Science 25.5 (2001): 775-818.



Shloss, Carol. Flannery O‟Connor‟s Dark Comedies. Baton Rouge, LA:

Louisiana State University Press, 1980.



Sloane, David E. E. “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”: American Comic

Vision. Boston, MA: G. K. Hall, 1988.



Sloane, David E. E. American Humor Magazines and Comic Periodicals.

Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1987.



Sloane, David E. E. “Literary Comedians, Literary Comedy, and Mark Twain.

Special issue of Studies in American Humor 3.22 (2010) 1-203.





54 90

Sloane, David E. E. The Literary Humor of the Urban

Northeast, 1830-1890. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana

State University Press, 1983.



Sloane, David E. E. “Mark Twain and Literary Comedy.”

Studies in American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 7-10.



Sloane, David E. E. Mark Twain as a Literary Comedian.

Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press,

1979.



Sloane, David E. E. Mark Twain‟s Humor: Critical

Essays. Hamden, CT: Garland, 1993.



Sloane, David E. E. New Directions in American Humor.

Birmingham, AL: Univ of Alabama Press, 1998.



54 91

Sloane, David E. E. “A Wide Perspective on Humor: A

Primer for Humor Research.” Studies in American

Humor NS3.2 (2009): 110-116.



Snodgrass, Mary Ellen. The Encyclopedia of Satirical

Literature. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1996.



Sonnichsen, C. L. The Laughing West: Humorous

Western Fiction, Past and Present. Athens, OH: Ohio

University Press, 1988.



Spacks, Patricia Meyer. “Logic and Language in

Through the Looking-Glass.” Etc. 18.1 (1961):



Spalding, Henry D. Encyclopedia of Jewish Humor:

From Biblical Times to the Modern Age. New York,

NY: Jonathan David, 1969.

54 92

Spalding, Henry D. Joys of Jewish Humor. New York,

NY: Jonathan David, 1985.



Stephenson, Mimosa. “Humor in Uncle Tom‟s Cabin.”

Studies in American Humor 3.2 (2009): 4-20.



Sypher, Wyllie, ed. Comedy. Garden City, NY:

Doubleday Anchor, 1956.



Thompson, Todd Nathan. “Slavery, Stereotypes, and

Satire: Laughing Fit to Kill. Studies in American

Humor 3.2 (2009): 98-109.



Tillman, Aaron. “„Through the Rube Goldberg Carzy

Straw‟: Ethnic Mobility and Narcissistic Fantasy in

Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic.” Studies in

American Humor 3.2 (2009): 58-84.



54 93

Tilton, John W. Cosmic Satire in the Contemporary Novel. Lewisburg, PA:

Bucknell University Press, 1927.



Trachtenberg, Stanley, ed. Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 11:

American Humorists. Detroit, MI: Bruccoli Clark/Gale Research, 1982.



Triezenberg, Katrina E. “Humor Enhancers in the Study of Humorous

Literature.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 17.4

(2004): 411-418.



Triezenberg, Katrina E. “Humor in Literature” in Raskin (2008) 523-542.



Ulea, V. A Concept of Dramatic Genre and the Comedy of New Type:

Chess, Literature, and the Film. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois

University, 2002.



Utsumi, Akira. “Verbal Irony as Implicit Display of Ironic Environment:

Distinguishing Ironic Utterances from Non-Irony.” Journal of

Pragmatics 32.12 (2000): 1777-1806.









54 94

Vandaele, Jeroen, ed. Humour and Translation. Special

Issue of The Translator 8.2, 2002.



Walker, Nancy, and Zita Dresner. Redressing the

Balance: American Women‟s Literary Humor from

Colonial Times to the 1980s. Jackson, MS: University

Press of Mississippi, 1988.



Wallace, Ronald. No Harm in Smiling: Vladimir Nabokov‟s

“Lolita.” Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press,

1979.



Watkins, Mel. On the Real Side: Laughing, Lying, and

Signifying. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, 1994.



Watts, Robert. “The Comic Scenes in Othello.”

Shakespeare Quarterly 19 (1968): 349-354.

54 95

Wechsler, Robert. Columbus à la Mode: Parodies of Contemporary

American Writers. North Haven, CT: Catbird Press, 1993.



Weisenberger, Steven. Fables of Subversion/Satire and the

American Novel 1930-1980. Athens, GA: University of Georgia

Press, 1995.



Wernblad, Annette. Brooklyn Is Not Expanding: Woody Allen‟s

Comic Universe. Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses,

1992.



White, E. B., and Katherine S. White. A Subtreasury of American

Humor. New York, NY: Coward-McCann, 1941.



Winston, Mathew. “„Humour Noir” and „Black Humor.‟” in Veins of

Humor in Levin (1972): 269-284.









54 96

Wood, James. The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel.

New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004.



Wuster, Tracy. “The Great American Humorists: Mark Twain,

Artemus Ward, and American Humour in England.” Studies in

American Humor NS3.22 (2010): 91-128.



Yacowar, Maurice. Loser Take All: The Comic Art of Woody Allen.

New York, NY: Frederick Ungar, 1982.



Yan, Gao. The Art of Parody: Maxine Hong Kingston‟s Use of

Chinese Sources. New York, NY: Peter Lang, 1996.



Yus Ramos, Francisco. “On Reaching the Intended Ironic

Interpretation.” International Journal of Communication 10.1-2

(2000): 27-78.



Ziv, Avner, ed. Jewish Humor. Tel lAviv, Israel: Papyrus, 1986.







54 97


Related docs
Other docs by HC11111104567
1Zheng_Marine
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Purandara_Dasa
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
indstlp_e
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
land_not_for_sale
Views: 2  |  Downloads: 0
moran_gwraCA2004
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Lecture_5_Leptospirosis
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
03_06stats
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
standards
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
By registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!