Article published In:
Issues in Humour Cognition
Edited by Marta Dynel
[Review of Cognitive Linguistics 16:1] 2018
► pp. 7296
References (38)
References
Booth, W. (1975). A rhetoric of irony. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Burgers, C., Van Mulken, M., & Schellens, P. J. (2011). Finding irony: An introduction of the verbal irony procedure (VIP). Metaphor and Symbol, 261, 186–205. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Clark, H., & Gerrig, R. (1984). On the pretense theory of irony. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1131, 121–126. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Clark, H., & Van Der Wege, M. (2001). Imagination in discourse. In D. Schiffrin, D. Tannen, & H. Hamilton (Eds.), The handbook of discourse analysis (pp. 772–786). New York: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Currie, G. (2010). Narratives and narrators: A philosophy of stories. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dynel, M. (2017). But seriously: On conversational humour and (un)truthfulness. Lingua, 1971, 83–102. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2018). No child’s play: A philosophical pragmatic view of overt pretence as a vehicle for conversational humor. In V. Tsakona & J. Chovanec (Eds.), The dynamics of interactional humor: Creating and negotiating humor in everyday encounters (pp. 205–228). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Eder, D. (1991). The role of teasing in adolescent peer group culture. Sociological Studies of Child Development, 41, 181–197.Google Scholar
Flamson, T., & Barrett, C. (2008). The encryption theory of humor: A knowledge-based mechanism of honest signaling. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology, 61, 261–281. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Georgesen, J., Harris, M., Milich, R., & Bosko-Young, J. (1999). “Just teasing…”: Personality effects on perceptions and life narratives of childhood teasing. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 251, 1254–1267. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gibbs, R. (1994). The poetics of mind: Figurative thought, language, and understanding. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
(2000). Irony in talk among friends. Metaphor and Symbol, 151, 5–27. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2002). Irony in the wake of tragedy. Metaphor and Symbol, 171, 145–153. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2006). Embodiment and cognitive science. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
(2007). Why irony sometimes come to mind: Paradoxical effects of thought suppression. Pragmatics & Cognition, 151, 229–251. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2017). Metaphor wars: Conceptual metaphor in human life. New York: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gibbs, R., & Colston, H. (Eds.). (2007). Irony in language and thought: A cognitive science reader. New York: Erlbaum. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2012). Interpreting figurative meaning. New York: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Greene, V. (2011). Critique, counternarratives and ironic interventions in South Park and Stephen Colbert. In T. Gournelous & V. Greene (Eds.), A decade of dark humor: How comedy, irony, and satire shaped post 9–11 America (pp. 119–136). Jackson: University of Mississippi Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Harris, C., & Christenfeld, N. (1997). Humor, tickle, and the Darwin-Hecker hypothesis. Cognition & Emotion, 111, 103–111 DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kowalski, R. (2000). “I was only kidding!”: Victims’ and perpetrators’ perceptions of teasing. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 26(2), 231–241. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kumon-Nakamura, S., Glucksberg, S., & Brown, M. (1995). How about another piece of pie: The allusional pretense theory of discourse irony. Journal of Experimental Psychology, General, 124(1), 3–21. DOI logo.Google Scholar
Leung, A., Kim, S., Polman, E., Ong, L., Qiu, L., Goncalo, J., & Sanchez-Burks, J. (2011). Embodied metaphors and creative acts. Psychological Science, 231, 502–509. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Magill, R. J. (2007). Chic ironic bitterness. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
McGraw, A., & Warren, C. (2010). Benign violations make immoral behavior funny. Psychological Science, 211, 1141–1149. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
McGraw, A., & Warner, J. (2014). The humor code: A global search for what makes things funny. New York: Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Musolff, A. (2017). Metaphor, irony and sarcasm in public discourse. Journal of Pragmatics, 1091, 95–104. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Reddy, V., & Mireault, G. (2015). Teasing and clowning in infancy. Current Biology, 251, R20–R23. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Rosenblatt, R. (2001). The age of irony comes to an end. Time, 158(13).Google Scholar
Samermit, P., & Gibbs, R. (2016). Humor, the body, and cognitive linguistics. Cognitive Linguistic Studies, 21, 32–49. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Seckman, M., & Couch, C. (1989). Jocularity, sarcasm and relationships: An empirical study. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 181, 327–344. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Stern, D. N. (1985). The interpersonal world of the infant: A view from psychoanalysis and developmental psychology. London/New York: Karnac.Google Scholar
Strack, F., Martin, L. L., & Stepper, S. (1988). Inhibiting and facilitating conditions of the human smile: A nonobtrusive test of the facial feedback hypothesis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 541, 768–777. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Veale, T., Feyaerts, K., & Brone, G. (2006). The cognitive mechanisms of adversarial humor. Humor, 191, 303–338. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Warren, C., & McGraw, A. (2016). Differentiating what is humorous from what is not. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 110(3), 407–430. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Watts, A. (1998). “You are such a tease!” Identifying and describing the chronic teaser. Unpublished master’s thesis. Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC.Google Scholar
Wilson, N., & Gibbs, R. (2007). Real and imagined body movement primes metaphor comprehension. Cognitive Science, 311, 721–731. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zajonc, R., Murphy, S., & Inglehart, M. (1989). Feeling and facial efference: Implications of the vascular theory of emotion. Psychological Review, 961, 395–416. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cited by (6)

Cited by six other publications

Constantinescu, Mihaela-Viorica
2024. Conventional metaphorical scenarios of humor in Romanian. HUMOR 37:1  pp. 87 ff. DOI logo
Xu, Tingting, Meichun Liu & Xiaolu Wang
2023. How humor is experienced: An embodied metaphor account. Current Psychology 42:20  pp. 16674 ff. DOI logo
Brdar, Mario & Rita Brdar-Szabó
2022. Figurative thought and language research in the 21st century. In Figurative Thought and Language in Action [Figurative Thought and Language, 16],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Fabry, Regina E.
2021. Getting it: A predictive processing approach to irony comprehension. Synthese 198:7  pp. 6455 ff. DOI logo
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. DOI logo
Attardo, Salvatore
2020. Humor. In Handbook of Pragmatics [Handbook of Pragmatics, ],  pp. 155 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 15 july 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.