Article published In:
Pragmatics
Vol. 21:3 (2011) ► pp.393410
References
Attardo, S
(1994) Linguistic theories of humor. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Coser, R.L
(1960) Laughter among colleagues: A study of the social functions of laughter among the staff of a mental hospital. Psychiatry 231: 81-95. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Drew, P
(1987) Po-faced receipts of teases. Linguistics 251: 219-53. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Drew, P., and E. Holt
(1988) Complainable matters: The use of idiomatic expressions in making complaints. Social Problems 351: 398-417. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(1998) Figures of speech: Figurative expressions and the management of topic transition in conversation. Language in Society 271: 495-522. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Fillmore, C., P. Kay, and M.C. O’Connor
(1986) Regularity and idiomaticity in grammatical constructions: The case of “let alone”. Unpublished manuscript.
Ford, C.E., and B.A. Fox
(2010) Multiple practices for constructing laughables. In D. Barth, E. Reber & M. Selting (eds.), Prosody in Interaction. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Glenn, P
(2003) Laughter in interaction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Haakana, M
(1999) Laughing matters; a conversation analytical study of laughter in doctor-patient interaction. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Department of Finnish Language, University of Helsinki.
(2002) Laughter in medical interaction: From quantification to analysis, and back. Journal of Sociolinguistics 6.2: 207-235. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Haakana, M., and M.-L. Sorjonen
(2011) Invoking another context: Playfulness in buying lottery tickets at convenience stores. Journal of Pragmatics 431: 1288-1302. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Holt, E
(2000) Reporting and reacting: Concurrent responses to reported speech. Research on Language and Social Interaction 33.4: 425-454. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
(2010) The last laugh: Shared laughter and topic termination. Journal of Pragmatics 421: 1513-1525. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Jefferson, G
(1979) A technique for inviting laughter and its subsequent acceptance declination. In G. Psathas (ed.), Everyday language studies in ethnomethodology. New York: Irvington, pp. 79-96.Google Scholar
(1984) On the organization of laughter in talk about troubles. In J.M. Atkinson & J. Heritage (eds.), Structures of social action: Studies in conversation analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 346-369.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Koestler, A
(1964) The act of creation. London: Hutchinson.Google Scholar
Lavin, D., and D.W. Maynard
(2001) Standardization vs. rapport: How interviewers handle the laughter of respondents during telephone surveys. American Sociological Review 661: 453-479. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Long, D.L., and A.C. Graesser
(1988) Wit and humour in discourse processes. Discourse Processes 111: 35-60. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Morreall, J
(1983) Taking laughter seriously. Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Mulkay, M
(1988) On humour; its nature and its place in modern society. Cambridge: Polity Press.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Nash, W
(1985) The language of humour. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Raskin, V
(1985) Semantic mechanisms of humour. Dordrecht: D. Reidel.Google Scholar
Sacks, H
(1974) An analysis of the course of a joke’s telling in conversation. In R. Bauman and J. Sherzer (eds.), Explorations in the ethnography of speaking. London: Cambridge University Press, pp. 337-353.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Schegloff, E.A., and H. Sacks
(1973) Opening up closings. Semiotica 81: 289-327. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Schenkein, J.N
(1972) Towards an analysis of natural conversation and the sense of hehe . Semiotica 61: 344-377. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sidnell, J
(2010) Conversation Analysis: An introduction. Chichester, U.K.: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Stivers, T., and F. Rossano
(2010) Mobilizing response. Research on Language and Social Interaction 43.1: 3-31. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Suls, J.M
(1977) Cognitive and disparagement theories of humor: A theoretical and empirical synthesis. In A.J. Chapman and H.C. Foot (eds.), It’s a funny thing, humour. Oxford: Pergamon. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 46 other publications

Beach, Wayne A. & Erin Prickett
2017. Laughter, Humor, and Cancer: Delicate Moments and Poignant Interactional Circumstances. Health Communication 32:7  pp. 791 ff. DOI logo
Beck Nielsen, Søren
2018. “If you don’t get better, you may come back here”: proposing conditioned follow-ups to the doctor’s office. Text & Talk 38:2  pp. 217 ff. DOI logo
Bonin, Francesca, Nick Campbell & Carl Vogel
2014. Time for laughter. Knowledge-Based Systems 71  pp. 15 ff. DOI logo
Cannon, Caitlyn, Joanne Meredith, Susan Speer & Warren Mansell
2020. A conversation analysis of asking about disruptions in method of levels psychotherapy. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research 20:1  pp. 154 ff. DOI logo
Chovanec, Jan
2017. Interactional humour and spontaneity in TV documentaries. Lingua 197  pp. 34 ff. DOI logo
Chovanec, Jan
2018. Chapter 7. Laughter and non-humorous situations in TV documentaries. In The Dynamics of Interactional Humor [Topics in Humor Research, 7],  pp. 155 ff. DOI logo
Clift, Rebecca
2016. Don’t make me laugh: Responsive laughter in (dis)affiliation. Journal of Pragmatics 100  pp. 73 ff. DOI logo
Curran, William, Gary J. McKeown, Magdalena Rychlowska, Elisabeth André, Johannes Wagner & Florian Lingenfelser
2018. Social Context Disambiguates the Interpretation of Laughter. Frontiers in Psychology 8 DOI logo
Degoumois, Virginie, Cécile Petitjean & Simona Pekarek Doehler
2017. Expressing Personal Opinions in Classroom Interactions: The Role of Humor and Displays of Uncertainty. In Interactional Competences in Institutional Settings,  pp. 29 ff. DOI logo
Dionigi, Alberto & Carla Canestrari
2018. The role of laughter in cognitive-behavioral therapy: Case studies. Discourse Studies 20:3  pp. 323 ff. DOI logo
Griffin, Harry J., Min. S. Hane Aung, Bernadino Romera-Paredes, Ciaran McLoughlin, Gary McKeown, William Curran & Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze
2015. Perception and Automatic Recognition of Laughter from Whole-Body Motion: Continuous and Categorical Perspectives. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 6:2  pp. 165 ff. DOI logo
Hanks, Elizabeth
2022. A cross-linguistic comparison of the propositional content of laughter in American English and Central Thai. Intercultural Pragmatics 19:2  pp. 233 ff. DOI logo
Haugh, Michael
2014. Jocular Mockery as Interactional Practice in Everyday Anglo-Australian Conversation. Australian Journal of Linguistics 34:1  pp. 76 ff. DOI logo
Heinsch, Milena, Hannah Cootes, Hannah Wells, Campbell Tickner, Dara Sampson & Frances Kay-Lambkin
2022. “It’s Hard, but We Could Kind of Laugh About It”: Exploring the Role of Humor in Brain Cancer Caregiving. Qualitative Health Research 32:5  pp. 744 ff. DOI logo
Holt, ELizabeth
2012. Conversation Analysis and Laughter. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics, DOI logo
Holt, Elizabeth
2016. Laughter at Last: Playfulness and laughter in interaction. Journal of Pragmatics 100  pp. 89 ff. DOI logo
Holt, Elizabeth
2020. Conversation Analysis and Laughter. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Holt, Elizabeth & Phillip Glenn
2015. Laughter. In Handbook of Pragmatics, DOI logo
Hosoda, Yuri & David Aline
2015. Single episode analysis of extended conflict talk sequences in second language classroom discussion. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 3:2  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo
Kaneyasu, Michiko & Shoichi Iwasaki
2017. Indexing ‘entrustment’: An analysis of the Japanese formulaic construction [N da yo N]. Discourse Studies 19:4  pp. 402 ff. DOI logo
Kantara, Argyro
2019. Laughter and identity construction in political interviews. Journal of Language and Politics 18:3  pp. 420 ff. DOI logo
Kantara, Argyro
2022. Manifestations of Integrated Hybridity in Journalistic Questioning During the 2012 Elections in Greece. In Adversarial Political Interviewing,  pp. 43 ff. DOI logo
Karachaliou, Rania & Argiris Archakis
2018. Chapter 2. Reactions to jab lines in conversational storytelling. In The Dynamics of Interactional Humor [Topics in Humor Research, 7],  pp. 29 ff. DOI logo
Karafoti, Eleni
2019. Attending to a possible complaint. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 7:2  pp. 269 ff. DOI logo
Kaukomaa, Timo, Anssi Peräkylä & Johanna Ruusuvuori
2015. How Listeners Use Facial Expression to Shift the Emotional Stance of the Speaker’s Utterance. Research on Language and Social Interaction 48:3  pp. 319 ff. DOI logo
Khafaga, Ayman
2022. Semiotic staging of the ideological point of view in Amiri Baraka’sSlave Ship: A social-semiotic approach. Cogent Arts & Humanities 9:1 DOI logo
Landert, Daniela
2021. The spontaneous co-creation of comedy: Humour in improvised theatrical fiction. Journal of Pragmatics 173  pp. 68 ff. DOI logo
McKay, Isabel
2020. Some distributional patterns in the use of typed laughter-derived expressions on Twitter. Journal of Pragmatics 166  pp. 97 ff. DOI logo
McKenzie, Kevin
2022. Vicissitudes of laughter. Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)  pp. 257 ff. DOI logo
McKeown, Gary, William Curran, Ciaran McLoughlin, Harry J. Griffin & Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze
2013. 2013 10th IEEE International Conference and Workshops on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition (FG),  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
McKeown, Gary, William Curran, Johannes Wagner, Florian Lingenfelser & Elisabeth Andre
2015. 2015 International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (ACII),  pp. 166 ff. DOI logo
McKeown, Gary, Ian Sneddon & William Curran
2015. Gender Differences in the Perceptions of Genuine and Simulated Laughter and Amused Facial Expressions. Emotion Review 7:1  pp. 30 ff. DOI logo
Mills, Gregory, Eleni Gregoromichelaki, Chris Howes & Vladislav Maraev
2021. Influencing laughter with AI-mediated communication. Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems 22:3  pp. 416 ff. DOI logo
Mitchell, Nathaniel & Michael Haugh
2015. Agency, accountability and evaluations of impoliteness. Journal of Politeness Research 11:2 DOI logo
Myers, Greg & Sofia Lampropoulou
2016. Laughter, non-seriousness and transitions in social research interview transcripts. Qualitative Research 16:1  pp. 78 ff. DOI logo
Nikopoulos, James
2017. The stability of laughter. HUMOR 30:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Petitjean, Cécile & Etienne Morel
2017. “Hahaha”: Laughter as a resource to manage WhatsApp conversations. Journal of Pragmatics 110  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Poli, Silvia, Lidia Borghi, Martina De Stasio, Daniela Leone & Elena Vegni
2021. Laughs and Jokes in Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of Video-Recorded Doctor-Couple Visits. Frontiers in Psychology 12 DOI logo
Quignard, Matthieu, Biagio Ursi, Nathalie Rossi-Gensane, Virginie André, Heike Baldauf-Quilliatre, Carole Etienne, Christian Plantin, Véronique Traverso, F. Neveu, G. Bergounioux, M.-H. Côté, J.-M. Fournier, L. Hriba & S. Prévost
2016. Une méthode instrumentée pour l’analyse multidimensionnelle des tonalités émotionnelles dans l’interaction. SHS Web of Conferences 27  pp. 15004 ff. DOI logo
Romaniuk, Tanya
2016. On the relevance of gender in the analysis of discourse: A case study from Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential bid in 2007–2008. Discourse & Society 27:5  pp. 533 ff. DOI logo
Rydén Gramner, Anja
2022. Moving books and sensitive readers. Communication and Medicine 18:1 DOI logo
Rydén Gramner, Anja
2023. Feeling rules for professionals: medical students constructing emotional labour in fiction talk. Studies in Continuing Education 45:3  pp. 265 ff. DOI logo
Skogmyr Marian, Klara, Cécile Petitjean & Simona Pekarek Doehler
2017. Le développement de la compétence d’interaction en langue seconde : état des lieux et illustrations empiriques. Revue française de linguistique appliquée Vol. XXII:2  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Tao, Hongyin
2022. Multimodal amusement resonance as a conversation interactional device. East Asian Pragmatics 7:3  pp. 333 ff. DOI logo
Çopur, Nimet & Adam Brandt
2024. Teacher’s squeezed-mouth smile as a practice for managing affiliation in L2 classrooms. Classroom Discourse  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 13 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.