Irony has traditionally been studied as a purely pragmatic phenomenon, one in which a speaker says one thing and means another,
often by commenting on the contrast between expectation and reality. However, as cognitive linguists have discerned for many other
aspects of language, much of the ways that people speak and understand one another is motivated by people’s pervasive bodily
experiences. Ironic humor provides another compelling phenomenon in which to understand the embodied foundation of both linguistic
meaning and multimodal expression, particularly in terms of rough-and-tumble play. Many forms of humor arise from different benign
violations of the body in play fighting. We describe cognitive linguistic and psychological evidence on the importance of bodily
experience, and benign violations of the body, in linguistic expressions referring to teasing and humor. Variations of
rough-and-tumble play help explain some of the instabilities in the ways ironic humor unfolds in interpersonal interactions.
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Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
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2024. Conventional metaphorical scenarios of humor in Romanian. HUMOR 37:1 ► pp. 87 ff.
Xu, Tingting, Meichun Liu & Xiaolu Wang
2023. How humor is experienced: An embodied metaphor account. Current Psychology 42:20 ► pp. 16674 ff.
2021. Getting it: A predictive processing approach to irony comprehension. Synthese 198:7 ► pp. 6455 ff.
Roig, Antoni & Sandra Martorell
2021. A fictional character in a real pandemic: humanization of the Covid-19 virus as a parody account on Twitter. Information, Communication & Society 24:6 ► pp. 886 ff.
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