Understanding ethnic humour in Romanian jokes
The study of ethnic humour is as popular in the world as ethnic jokes themselves. However, the topic has scarcely been addressed in the Romanian context, and certainly not from a linguistic perspective. This small-scale study represents an attempt to map the territory and understand the interdependence of these jokes with the changing social reality of the transition period that Romania is going through at present. The paper aims to identify, describe and discuss the main ethnic scripts and targets used in Internet Romanian ethnic jokes, and to account for culture-specific elements. Next, the study focuses on jokes about Roma and Hungarians, the two leading minorities in Romania, specifically on stupidity jokes based on language distortion. Language jokes can relate to stupidity but also to canniness, and the two ethnic minorities are portrayed as both stupid and canny, a fact that both constitutes an exception and complements existing theory in ethnic humour research.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Iliescu-Gheorghiu, Catalina
2023.
Translating humour in children’s theatre for (unintended) diasporic audiences.
The European Journal of Humour Research 11:2
► pp. 142 ff.
Hamrick, Stephen
2020.
Shakespeare Doesn’t Mind. In
Shakespeare and Sexuality in the Comedy of Morecambe & Wise,
► pp. 1 ff.
Tudor, Noémi
2020.
Constructing Ethnic Identity in Transylvania through Humour.
Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica 12:2
► pp. 144 ff.
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