(2015) Humour and gender hegemony: The panoptical role of ridicule vis-à-vis gender. Ph.D. Dissertation. University of Alberta.
Abedinifard, Mostafa
(2016a) Ridicule, gender hegemony, and the disciplinary function of mainstream gender humour. Social Semiotic, 26(3), 234–249.
Abedinifard, Mostafa
(2016b) Structural functions of the targeted joke: Iranian modernity and the Qazvini man as predatory homosexual. Humor: International journal of humor research, 29(3), 337–357.
Afary, Janet
(1996) The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906–1911: Grassroots democracy, social democracy, and the origins of feminism. New York: Columbia University Press.
Afary, Janet
(2012) Feminist movements i. Introduction, ii. In the late Qajar period. Iranica. Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Ahmad, Aijaz
(1987) Jameson’s rhetoric of otherness and the “national allegory”. Social Text, 17, 3–25.
Ahmad, Aijaz
(2000) In theory: Classes, nations, literatures. London and New York: Verso.
Alwin, Duane F., Jacob L. Felson, Edward T. Walker and Paula A. Tufiş
(2006) Measuring religious identities in surveys. The public opinion quarterly, 70(4), 530–564.
Anderson, Benedict
(2006) Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. Revised ed. London and New York: Verso.
Appiah, Kwame Anthony
(2005) The ethics of identity. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Archakis, Argiris, and Villy Tsakona
(2005) Analyzing conversational data in GTVH terms: A new approach to the issue of identity construction via humor. Humor: International journal of humor research, 18(1), 41–68.
Ashcroft, Bill, and Pal Ahluwalia
(1999) Edward Said: The paradox of identity. London and New York: Routledge.
Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin
eds. (2003) The post-colonial studies reader. New York: Routledge.
Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin
(1994) The empire writes back: Theory and practice in post-colonial literatures. London and New York: Routledge.
Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin
(2007) Post-colonial studies: Key concepts. 2nd ed. London and New York: Routledge.
Ashcroft, Bill
(2001) On post-colonial futures: Transformations of colonial culture. London and New York: Continuum.
Ashcroft, Bill
(2009) Caliban’s voice: The transformation of English in post-colonial literatures. London and New York: Routledge.
Ashcroft, Bill
(2010) Transnations. In Janet Wilson, Cristina Şandru, and Sarah Lawson Welsh (Eds.), Rerouting the postcolonial: New directions for the new millennium (pp. 72–85). London and New York: Routledge.
Astarābādī, Bībī Khānum
(1896) Maʿāyib al-rijāl [Vices of men]. Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Astarābādī, Bībī Khānum
(1898) Maʿāyib al-rijāl [Vices of men]. Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Astarābādī
(2010) The education of women: &, The vices of men: Two Qajar tracts. Trans. Hasan Javadi and Willem M. Floor. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press.
Attardo, Salvatore, Chrisitian F. Hempelmann and Sara Di Maio
(2002) Script oppositions and logical mechanisms: Modeling incongruities, and their resolutions. Humor: International journal of humor research, 15(1), 3–46.
Attardo, Salvatore
(1994) Linguistic theories of humor. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Attardo, Salvatore
(2008) A primer for the linguistics of humor. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 101–155). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Azim, Firdous
(2001) Post-colonial theory. In Christa Knellwolf and Christopher Norris (Eds.), The Cambridge history of literary criticism. Vol. 9. Twentieth-century historical, philosophical and psychological perspectives (pp. 237–247). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Baines, Paul
(2014) Female satirists of the eighteenth century. In Robert DeMaria, Jr., Heesok Chang, and Samantha Zacher (Eds.), A companion to British literature: Volume III: Long eighteenth-century literature 1660–1837 (pp. 95–112). Malden: Wiley Blackwell.
Bakhtin, Mikhail
(1984) Rabelais and his world. Trans. Helene Iswolsky. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Barker, Chris
(2004) The Sage dictionary of cultural studies. London, Thousand Oaks, and New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Basu, S.
(1999) Dialogic ethics and the virtue of humor. The journal of political philosophy, 7(4), 378–403.
Belas, Oliver
(2011) Performativity. In Robert Eaglestone (Ed.), The encyclopedia of literary and cultural theory. Vol. II (pp. 758–761). Malden, M.A.: Wiley-Blackwell.
Bennington, Geoffrey
(1995) Postal politics and the institution of the nation. In Homi K. Bhabha (Ed.), Nation and narration (pp. 121–137). London and New York: Routledge.
Bergson, Henri
(1917) Laughter: An essay on the meaning of the comic. Trans. Cloudesley Brereton and Fred Rothwell. New York: Macmillan.
Bhabha, Homi K.
(1995) Introduction: Narrating the Nation In Homi K. Bhabha (Ed.), Nation and narration (pp. 1–7). London and New York: Routledge.
Bhabha, Homi K.
(1995) DissemiNation: Time, narrative, and the margins of the modern nation. In Homi K. Bhabha (Ed.), Nation and narration (pp. 291–323). London and New York: Routledge.
Bhabha, Homi K.
(2007) Location of culture. London and New York: Routledge.
Bhabha, Homi K.
(2008) Foreword to the 1986 edition. In Frantz Fanon, Black skin, white masks (pp. xxi–xxxvii), Trans. Charles Lam Markmann. London: Pluto Press.
Bhabha, Homi K.
(Ed.) (1995) Nation and narration. London and New York: Routledge.
Bierce, Ambrose
(2002) The unabridged devil’s dictionary. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press.
Billig, Michael
(2001) Humour and hatred: The racist jokes of the Ku Klux Klan. Discourse and society, 12(3), 267–289.
Billig, Michael
(2005) Laughter and ridicule: Towards a social critique of humour. London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Bing, Janet, and Dana Heller
(2003) How many lesbians does it take to screw in a light bulb?Humor: International journal of humor research, 16(2), 157–182.
Bing, Janet
(2004) Is feminist humor an oxymoron?Women and language, 27(1), 22–33.
Bing, Janet
(2007) Liberated jokes: Sexual humor in all-female groups. Humor: International journal of humor research, 20(4), 337–366.
Bogel, Fredric V.
(2001) The difference satire makes. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.
Bouissac, Paul
(2015) The semiotics of clowns and clowning: Rituals of transgression and the theory of laughter. London, New Delhi, New York and Sydney: Bloomsbury.
Bourdieu, Pierre
(1984) Distinction: A social critique of the judgment of taste. Trans. Richard Nice. Cambridge, M.A.: Harvard University Press.
Boyd. Brian
(2004) Laughter and literature: A play theory of humor. Philosophy and literature, (28), 1–22.
Boyle, Frank T.
(1988) Profane and debauched deist: Swift in the contemporary response to “A Tale of a Tub”. Eighteenth-century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr, (3), 25–38.
Braund, Susanna H.
(1992) Juvenal – misogynist or misogamist?. Journal of Roman studies, 82, 71–86.
Brennan, Timothy
(1995) The national longing for form. In Homi K. Bhabha (Ed.), Nation and narration (pp. 44–70). London and New York: Routledge.
Brennan, Timothy
(2004) Postcolonial studies and globalization theory. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 120–138). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Brock, Alexander
(2009) Humour as a metacommunicative process. Journal of literary theory, 3(2), 177–194.
Brookshaw, Dominic Parviz
(2009) Love and desire in pre-modern Persian poetry and prose. Iranian studies, 42(5), 673–675.
Brookshaw, Dominic Parviz
(2012) Have you heard the one about the man from Qazvin? Regionalist humor in the works of ʿUbayd-i Zākānī. In Dominic Parviz Brookshaw (Ed.), Ruse and wit: The humorous in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish narrative (pp. 44–69). Boston and Washington D.C.: Ilex Foundation, and Center for Hellenic Studies Trustees for Harvard University.
Brotton, Jerry
(2006) The Renaissance: A very short introduction. New York: Oxford University Press.
Butler, Judith P.
(1987) Subjects of desire: Hegelian reflections in twentieth-century France. New York: Columbia University Press.
Butler, Judith
(2004) Undoing gender. New York and London: Routledge.
Butler, Martin
(2006) The Masque of Blackness and Stuart court culture. In Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr., Patrick Cheney, and Andrew Hadfield (Eds.), Early modern English drama: A critical companion (pp. 152–163). New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bywaters, David
(1996) Anticlericism in Swift’sTale of a Tub. Studies in English literature, 1500–1900, 36(3), 579–602.
Carrell, Amy
(2008) Historical views of humor. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 303–332). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Carroll, Joseph
(2004) Literary Darwinism: Evolution, human nature, and literature. New York and London, Routledge.
Casanova, Pascale
(2004) The world republic of letters. Trans. M. B. DeBevoise. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press.
Chiesa, Lorenzo
(2007) Subjectivity and otherness: A philosophical reading of Lacan. Cambridge and London: The MIT Press.
Childs, Peter, and Patrick Williams
(1997) An introduction to post-colonial theory. Essex: Pearson Education.
Cohen, Robin
(1995) Fuzzy frontiers of identity: The British case. Social identities, 1(1), 35–62.
Cole, Andrew
(2014) The birth of theory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Colebrook, Claire
(2002) Gilles Deleuze. London and New York: Routledge.
Colley, Linda
(1992) Britishness and otherness: An argument. Journal of British studies, 31(4), 309–329.
Condren, Conal
(2012) Satire and definition. Humor: International journal of humor research, 25(4), 375–399.
Connery, Brian A., and Kirk Combe
(1995) Theorizing satire: A retrospective and introduction. In Brian A. Connery and Kirk Combe (Eds.), Theorizing satire: Essays in literary criticism (pp. 1–15). New York: St. Martin’s Press.
Connolly, William E.
(1985) Taylor, Foucault, and otherness. Political theory, 13(3), 365–376.
Critchley, Simon
(2002) On humour. London and New York: Routledge.
Cross, Julie
(2011) Humor in contemporary junior literature. London and New York: Routledge.
Culler, Jonathan
(2000) Literary theory: A very short introduction. New York: Oxford University Press.
Damrosch, Leo
(2013) Jonathan Swift: His life and his world. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Davies, Christie
(2014) Political ridicule and humour under socialism. European journal of humour research, 2(3), 1–27.
Davis, Dineh
(2008) Communication and humor. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 543–568). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Davis, Herbert
(1965) Introduction. In Herbert Davis (Ed.), The Drapier’s letters to the people of Ireland against receiving Wood’s halfpence (pp. ix–xcvii). London: Oxford University Press.
Davis, Jessica Milner
(2014) Traditional comic conflicts in farce and roles for women. In Delia Chiaro and Raffaella Baccolini (Eds.), Gender and humor: Interdisciplinary and international perspectives (pp. 30–52). New York and London: Routledge.
Davis, Jessica Milner
(2016) Satire and its constraints: Case studies from Australia, Japan, and the People’s Republic of China. Humor: International journal of humor research, 29(2), 197–221.
De Beauvoir, Simon
(2011) The second sex. Trans. Constance Borde and Wheila Malovany Chevallier. New York: Vintage Books.
Dentith, Simon
(1996) Bakhtinian thought: An introductory reader. New York: Routledge.
Derrida, Jacques
(1982) Différance. In Jacques Derrida, Margins of philosophy (pp. 1–27). Trans. Alan Bass. Sussex: The Harvester Press.
Devi, Gayatri and Najat Rahman
(2014) Humor in Middle Eastern cinema. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
Dias, Bernardo Enes
(2013) The return from otherness: Hegel’s paradox of self-consciousness in the Phenomenology of Spirit. Otherness: Essays and studies, 4(1), 1–21.
Dirlik, Arif
(1994) The postcolonial aura: Third world criticism in the age of global capitalism. Critical inquiry, 20(2), 328–356.
Dodds, E. R.
(1997) The Greeks and the irrational. Berkley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press.
Doody, Margaret Anne
(1988) Swift among the women. The yearbook of English studies, 18, 68–92.
Doody, Margaret Anne
(2003) Swift and women. In Christopher Fox (Ed), The Cambridge companion to Jonathan Swift (pp. 87–111). New York: Cambridge University Press.
Drucker, Ari, Ofer Fein, Dafna Bergerbest, and Rachel Giora
(2014) On sarcasm, social awareness, and gender. Humor: International journal of humor research, 27(4), 551–573.
duCille, Ann
(1998) Dyes and dolls: Multicultural Barbie and the merchandizing of difference. In Jessica Munns, and Gita Rajan (Eds.), A cultural studies reader: History, theory, practice (pp. 550–567). London and New York: Longman.
During, Simon
(1987) Postmodernism or post-colonialism today. Textual practice, 1(1), 32–47.
During, Simon
(2015) When literary criticism mattered. In Rónán McDonald (Ed.), The values of literary studies: Critical institutions, scholarly agendas (pp. 120–136). New York: Cambridge University Press.
Easthope, Antony
(1996) Literary into cultural studies. London and New York: Routledge.
Easthope, Antony
(1998) Bhabha, hybridity and identity. Textual practice, 12(2), 341–348.
Edwards, John
(2009) Language and identity: An introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
(1999) Speaking for the Irish nation: The Drapier, the Bishop, and the problems of colonial representation. ELH, 66(2), 337–372.
Fabricant, Carole
(2005) Colonial sublimities and sublimations: Swift, Burke, and Ireland. ELH, 72(2), 309–337.
Fanon, Frantz
(1991) The wretched of the earth. Trans. Constance Farrington. New York: Grove Weidenfeld.
Fanon, Frantz
(2008) Black skin, white masks. Trans. Charles Lam Markmann. London: Pluto Press.
Farjami, Mahmud
(2014) Political satire as an index of press freedom: A review of political satire in the Iranian press during the 2000s. Iranian Studies, 47(2), 217–239.
Ferguson, Mark A., and Thomas E. Ford
(2008) Disparagement humor: A theoretical and empirical review of psychoanalytic, superiority, and social identity theories. Humor: International journal of humor research, 21(3), 283–312.
Ferris, David
(2011) Why compare? In Ali Behdad, and Dominic Thomas (Eds.), A Companion to comparative literature (pp. 28–45). West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
Foucault, Michel
(2001) What is an author? In Vincent B. Leitchet al. (Eds.), The Norton anthology of theory and criticism (pp. 1622–1636). New York and London: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Foucault, Michel
(2004) Archeology of knowledge. London and New York: Routledge.
Freedman, William
(1989) Dynamic identity and the hazards of satire in Swift. Studies in English literature, 29(3), 473–488.
Freud, Sigmund
(1964) Jokes and their relation to the unconscious. Trans. James Strachey. London: Hogarth Press.
Freud, Sigmund
(2010a) An outline of psychoanalysis. In Ivan Smith (Ed.), Complete Works (pp. 4954–5011).
Freud, Sigmund
(2010b) Humour. In Ivan Smith (Ed.), Complete works (pp. 4539–4545).
Freudenburg, Kirk
(2004) Satires of Rome: Threatening poses from Lucilius to Juvenal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Frye, Northrop
(1973) Anatomy of criticism: Four essays. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Geybels, Hans, and Walter Van Herck
(Eds.) (2011a) Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities. London and New York: Continuum.
Geybels, Hans, and Walter van Herck
(2011b) Introduction. In Hans Geybels and Walter van Herck (Eds.), Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities (pp. 1–8). London and New York: Continuum.
Geybels, Hans
(2011) The redemptive power of humour in religion. In Hans Geybels and Walter van Herck (Eds.), Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities (pp. 11–21). London and New York: Continuum.
Gikandi, Simon
(2004) Poststructuralism and postcolonial discourse. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 97–119). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gikandi, Simon
(2010) Between roots and routs: Cosmopolitanism and the claims of locality. In Janet Wilson, Cristina Şandru, and Sarah Lawson Welsh (Eds.), Rerouting the postcolonial: New directions for the new millennium (pp. 22–35). London and New York: Routledge.
Gilbert, Sandra M. and Susan Gubar
(2000) The madwoman in the attic: The woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination. 2nd ed. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Gilhus, Ingvild Sælid
(2004) Laughing gods, weeping virgins: Laughter in the history of religion. London and New York: Routledge.
Gilhus, Ingvild Salid
(2011) Why did Jesus laugh? Laughing in Biblical-Demiurgical texts. In Hans Geybels and Walter van Herck (Eds.), Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities (pp. 123–140). London and New York: Continuum.
Göktürk, Deniz
(2008) Jokes and butts: Can we imagine humor in a global public sphere?PMLA, 123(5), 1707–1711.
Goldie, Terry
(2003) The representation of the indigin. In Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin (Eds.), The post-colonial studies reader (pp. 232–236). New York: Routledge.
Green, Peter
(1989) Juvenal revisited. Grand street, 9(1), 175–196.
Greenblatt, Stephen, et al.
(Eds.) (2006) Norton anthology of English literature. 8th ed. Vol. 1. New York and London: W. W. Norton and Company.
Greenblatt, Stephen
(1980) Renaissance self-refashioning: From Moore to Shakespeare. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.
Greenblatt, Stephen
(1991) Marvelous possessions: The wonders of the new world. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Habib, M. A. R.
(2008) A history of literary criticism and theory: Form Plato to present. Malden, M.A.: Blackwell.
Habib, Rania
(2008) Humor and disagreement: Identity construction and cross-cultural enrichment. Journal of pragmatics, 40, 1117–1145.
Ḥalabī, Alī A.
(2005/6) ZākānīNāmih. Tehran: Zavvār.
Hall, Stuart
(1990) Cultural identity and diaspora In Jonathan Rutherford (Ed.), Identity: Community, culture, difference (pp. 222–237). London: Lawrence & Wishart.
Hamilton, Edith
(1998) Mythology. New York and Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
Harrington, J. M.
(2009) Mens sana: Authorized emotions and the construction of identity and deviance in the Saturae of Juvenal. Ph.D. dissertation. The University of Michigan.
Hegel, G. W. F.
(1973/4) Khudāygān va bandih. Trans. Ḥamīd ʿInāyat. Tehran: Khārazmī.
Hegel, G. W. F.
(1977) Phenomenology of the spirit. Trans. A. V. Miller. New York: Oxford University Press.
Hempelmann, Christian F.
(2004) Script opposition and logical mechanism in punning. Humor: International journal of humor research, 17(4), 381–392.
Hempelmann, Christian F., and William Ruch
(2005) 3 WD meets GTVH: Breaking the ground for interdisciplinary humor research. Humor: International journal of humor research, 18(4), 353–387.
Hempelmann, Christian F., and Andrea C. Samson
(2008) Cartoons: Drawn jokes? In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 609–640). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Hesiod
(2010) Theogony; and, works and days. Translated and with introductions by Catherine M. Schlegel and Henry Weinfield. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.
Highet, Gilbert
(1960) Juvenal the satirist: A study. London: Oxford University Press.
Highet, Gilbert
(1962) The anatomy of satire. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Homer, Sean
(2005) Jacques Lacan. London and New York: Routledge.
Hooley, Daniel M.
(2007) Roman satire. Malden, Oxford and Victoria: Blackwell Publishing.
Howitt, Dennis, and Kwame Owusu-Bempah
(2005) Race and ethnicity in popular humour. In Sharon Lockyer and Michael Pickering (Eds.), Beyond a joke: the limits of humour (pp. 45–62). New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Huddart, David
(2006) Homi K. Bhbaha. London and New York: Routledge.
Hume, Kathryn
(2007) Diffused satire in contemporary American fiction. Modern philology, 105(2), 300–325.
Hutcheon. Linda
(2005) Irony’s edge: The theory and politics of irony. London and New York: Routledge.
ʿInāyat, Ḥamīd
(1973/4) Introduction. In G. W. F. Hegel, Khudāygān va bandih (pp. 5–24). Trans. Ḥamīd ʿInāyat. Tehran: Khārazmī.
Irigaray, Luce
(1985) This sex which is not one. Trans. Catherine Porter and Carolyn Burke. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press.
Iser, Wolfgang
(2007) How to do theory. Singapore: Blackwell.
James, Aju Basil
(2014) Humour as resistance: Disaster humour in post-9/11 United States. European journal of humour research, 2(3), 28–41.
Jameson, Fredric
(1986) Third-world literature in the era of multinational capitalism. Social text, 15, 65–88.
JanMohamed, Abdul R.
(1985) The economy of Manichean allegory: The function of racial difference in colonialist literature. Critical inquiry, 12(1), 59–87.
Javādī, Ḥasan
(2005) Tārīkh-i ṭanz dar adabīyyat-i Fārsī [History of satire in Persian literature]. Tehran: Kāravān.
Johnson, Barbara
(2009) Writing. In David Damrosch, Natalie Melas, and Mbongiseni Buthelez (Eds.), The Princeton sourcebook in comparative literature: From the European enlightenment to the global present (pp. 228–239). Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.
Johnson, W. R.
(1996) Male victimology in Juvenal 6. Ramus, 25, 170–186.
Jowitt, Claire
(2006) The Island Princess and race. In Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr., Patrick Cheney, and Andrew Hadfield (Eds.), Early modern English drama: A critical companion (pp. 287–297). New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Juvenal
(2006) Juvenal book 2nd: Satire 6th: Englished against women. Trans. William Popple. Translation and literature, 15, 51–82.
Kairoff, Claudia Thomas
(2007) Gendering satire: Behn to Burney. In Ruben Quintero (Ed.), A companion to satire (pp. 226–292). Malden: Blackwell.
Kaul, Suvir
(2009) Eighteenth-century British literature and postcolonial studies. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Kernan, Alvin B.
(1959) A theory of satire. In Alvin B. Kernan (Ed.), The cankerd muse. New Haven: Yale University Press. Rpt. in Modern Satire
(pp. 164–179). New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1962.
Klein, Richard
(2010) The future of literary criticism. PMLA, 125(4), 920–923.
Knight, Charles A.
(2004) The literature of satire. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.
Kochersberger, Annie O., Thomas E. Ford, Julie A. Woodzicka, Monica Romero-Sanchez, Hugo Carretero-Dios
(2014) The role of identification with women as a determinant of and amusement with sexist humor. Humor: International journal of humor research, 27(3), 441–460.
Korycki, Katarzyna, and Abouzar Nasirzadeh
(2016) Desire recast: The production of gay identity in Iran. Journal of gender studies, 25(1), 50–65.
(1982) Powers of horror: An essay on abjection. Trans. Leon S. Roudiez. New York: Columbia University Press.
Kuipers, Giselinde
(2008) The sociology of humor. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 361–398). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Kuipers, Giselinde
(2009) Humor styles and symbolic boundaries. Journal of literary theory, 3(2), 219–240.
Kunovich, Robert M.
(2006) An exploration of the salience of Christianity for national identity in Europe. Sociological perspectives, 49(4), 435–460.
Lacan, Jacques
(1993) The seminar. Book III. The psychoses, 1955–56. London: Routledge.
Lacan, Jacques
(2006) Écrits. Trans. Bruce Fink. New York and London: Norton.
Layman, Fred D.
(1988) Theology and humor. The Asbury seminarian, 38(1), 3–25.
Lazarus, Neil
(Ed.) (2004a) Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lazarus, Neil
(2004b) Introducing postcolonial studies. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 1–16). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lee-Price, Simon
(2001) African American literary history and criticism. In Christa Knellwolf and Christopher Norris (Eds.), The Cambridge history of literary criticism. Vol. 9. Twentieth-century historical, philosophical and psychological perspectives (pp. 249–265). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lefcourt, Herbert M.
(2001) Humor: The psychology of living buoyantly. New York: Springer Science+Business Media.
Leitch, Vincent B.
(2008) Living with theory. Malden, Oxford, and Victoria Blackwell.
Leitch, Vincent B.
(2014) Literary criticism in the 21st century: Theory renaissance. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
Levinas, Emmanuel
(1987) Time and the other. Trans. Richard A. Cohen. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press.
Lewis, Paul
(Ed.) (2008) Christie Davies, Giselinde Kuipers, Rod A. Martin, Elliott Oring, and Victor Raskin. The Muhammad cartoons and humor research: A collection of essays. Humor: International journal of humor research, 21(1), 1–46.
Lockyer, Sharon, and Michael Pickering
(Eds.) (2005) Beyond a joke: The limits of humour. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Lockyer, Sharon, and Michael Pickering
(2008) You must be joking: The sociological critique of humour and comic media. Sociology compass, 2/3, 808–820.
Mansfield, Nick
(2000) Subjectivity: Theories of self and from Freud to Haraway. St. Leonards: Allen & Unwin.
Martin, Rod A.
(2007) The psychology of humor: An integrative approach. Burlington, San Diego, and London: Elsevier Academic Press.
McGhee, Paul E., and Jeffrey H. Goldstein
(1983) Handbook of humor research. New York: Springer-Verlag.
McGlade, Rhiannon
(2015) The “fets de Cu-Cut!” cartooning controversy in Catalonia. Romance quarterly, 62(4), 199–211.
Mercer, Kobena
(1990) Welcome to the jungle: Identity and diversity in postmodern politics. In Jonathan Rutherford (Ed.), Identity: Community, culture, difference (pp. 43–71). London: Lawrence & Wishart.
Mills, Sara
(1997) Discourse. London and New York: Routledge.
Minh-ha, Trinh T.
(2003) No master territories. In Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin (Eds.), The post-colonial studies reader (pp. 215–218). New York: Routledge.
Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley
(2006) The reasons that induced Dr. Swift to write a poem called the lady’s dressing room. In Stephen Greenblatt, et al. (Eds.), Norton anthology of English literature. 8th ed. Vol. 1 (pp. 2593–2595). New York and London: W. W. Norton and Company.
Moore, Sean
(2007) Devouring posterity: A modest proposal, empire, and Iceland’s “debt of nation”. PMLA, 122(3), 679–695.
Moore, Sean
(2009) Satiric norms, Swift’s financial and the bank of Ireland controversy of 1720–1721. In Harold Bloom (Ed.), Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels (pp. 9–42). New York: Bloom’s Literary Criticism.
Morreall, John
(1983) Taking laughter seriously. Albany: State University of New York.
Morreall, John
(1999) Comedy, tragedy, and religion. Albany: State University of New York.
Morreall, John
(2005) Humour and the conduct of politics. In Sharon Lockyer and Michael Pickering (Eds.), Beyond a joke: The limits of humour (pp. 63–78). New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Morreall, John
(2008) Philosophy and religion. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 211–242). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Morreall, John
(2009a) Comic relief: A comprehensive philosophy of humor. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
Morreall, John
(2009b) Humor as cognitive play. Journal of Literary Theory, 3(2), 241–260.
Morreall, John
(2013) Philosophy of humor. In Edward N. Zalta (Ed.), The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (Spring 2013 Edition). Retrieved at July 3, 2015, from [URL].
Morton, Stephen
(2003) Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. London and New York: Routledge.
Mueller, Judith C.
(1993) Writing under constraint: Swift’s “apology” for a tale of a tub. ELH, 60(1), 101–115
Mukherjee, Arun P.
(2003) Ideology in the classroom: A case study in the teaching of English literature in Canadian universities. In Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin (Eds.), The post-colonial studies reader (pp. 447–451). New York: Routledge.
(2005) Women with mustaches and men without beards: Gender and sexual anxieties of Iranian modernity. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press.
Nayar, Pramod K.
(2010) Postcolonialism: A guide for the perplexed. London and New York: Continuum.
Noonan, Harold, and Ben Curtis
(2014) Identity. In Edward N. Zalta (Ed.), The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (Summer 2014 Edition). Retrieved at June 27, 14 from [URL].
Norrick, Neal R.
(2009) A theory of humor in interaction. Journal of Literary Theory, 3(2), 261–284.
Nussbaum, Felicity
(1976) Juvenal, Swift, and the folly of love. Eighteenth-century studies, 9(4), 540–552.
Nussbaum. Felicity A.
(1984) The brink of all we hate: English satire on women 1660–1750. Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky.
OED
, 2nd ed. [DVD]. Oxford University Press 2009.
Okhovat, Ahmad
(1993) The semiotics of humour. Esfahan: Nashr-e Farda.
Olson, Eric T.
(2016) Personal identity. In Edward N. Zalta (ed.), The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (Spring 2016 Edition). Retrieved at December 9, 16 from [URL].
Oring, Elliott
(2011) Parsing the joke: The general theory of verbal humor and appropriate incongruity. Humor: International journal of humor research, 24(2), 203–222.
Orwell, George
(2013) Nineteen eighty-four. London and New York: Penguin.
Parry, Benita
(2004a) Postcolonial studies: A materialist critique. London and New York: Routledge.
Parry, Benita
(2004b) The institutionalization of postcolonial studies. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 66–80). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Pérez, Raúl, and Viveca S. Greene
(2016) Debating rape jokes vs. rape culture: Framing and counter-framing misogynistic comedy. Social Semiotics, 26(3), 265–282.
Perks, Lisa Glebatis
(2012) The ancient roots of humor theory. Humor: International journal of humor research, 25(2), 119–132.
Platt, Tracey, and Giovannantonio Forabosco
(2011) Gelotophobia: The fear of being laughed. In Paola Gremigni (Ed.), Humor and health (pp. 1–24). New York: Nova Science Publishers.
Previté-Orton, C. W.
(1968) Political satire in English poetry. New York: Russell & Russell.
Rabb, Melinda Alliker
(2007) The secret life of satire. In Ruben Quintero (Ed.), A companion to satire (pp. 568–584). Malden: Blackwell.
Raskin, Victor, Christian F. Hempelmann, and Julia M. Taylor
(2009) How to understand and assess a theory: The evolution of the SSTH into the GTVH and now into the OSTH. Journal of Literary Theory, 3(2), 285–312.
Raskin, Victor
(Ed.) (2008) The primer of humor research. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Raskin, Victor
(1985) Semantic mechanisms of humor. Dordrecht-Boston-Lancaster: D. Reidel.
Renan, Ernest
(1995) What is a nation? In Homi K. Bhabha (Ed.), Nation and narration (pp. 8–22). London and New York: Routledge.
Ridanpää, Juha
(2009) Geopolitics of humour: The Muhammed cartoon crisis and the Kaltio comic strip episode in Finland. Geopolitics, 14(4), 729–749.
Ritchie, Graeme
(2009) Variants of incongruity resolution. Journal of literary theory, 3(2), 313–332.
Roeckelein, Jon E.
(2002) The psychology of humor: A reference guide and annotated bibliography. Westport: Greenwood Press.
Ruch, Willibald, and Julia Malcherek
(2009) Sensation seeking, general aesthetic preferences, and humor appreciation as predictors of liking of the grotesque. Journal of literary theory, 3(2), 333–352.
Ruch, Willibald
(2008) Psychology of humor. In Victor Raskin (Ed.), The primer of humor research (pp. 17–100). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Rutherford, Jonathan
(Ed.) (1990) Identity: Community, culture, difference. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
Rutherford, Jonathan
(1990) A place called home: Identity and the cultural politics of difference. In Rutherford, Jonathan (Ed.), Identity: Community, culture, difference (pp. 9–27). London: Lawrence & Wishart.
Said, Edward W.
(1979) Orientalism. New York: Vintage Books.
Said, Edward W.
(1993) Culture and imperialism. London: Chatto & Windus.
Schaefer, Zachary A.
(2013) Getting dirty with humor: Co-constructing workplace identities through performative scripts. Humor: International journal of humor research, 26(4), 511–530.
Schiffrin, Deborah
(1996) Narrative as self-portrait: Sociolinguistic constructions of identity. Language in society, 25(2), 167–203.
(1999) Gender and the politics of history. New York: Columbia University press.
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky
(1990) Epistemology of the closet. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
Shamisa, Sirous
(2002) Sodomy: Based on Persian literature. Tehran: Firdausi.
Sharpe, Jenny
(2003) Figures of colonial resistance. In Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin (Eds.), The post-colonial studies reader (pp. 99–103). New York: Routledge.
Shifman, Limor, and Dafna Lemish
(2010) Between feminism and fun(ny)mism. Information, communication & society, 13(6), 870–891.
(2004) Anticolonialism, national liberation, postcolonial nation formation. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 41–65). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Smith, Andrew
(2004) Migrancy, hybridity, and postcolonial literary studies. In Neil Lazarus (Ed.), Cambridge companion to postcolonial studies (pp. 241–261). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Smith, Jr., Warren S.
(1980) Husband vs. wife in Juvenal’s sixth satire. The classical world, 73(6), 323–332.
Smith, Warren S.
(Ed.) (2005) Satiric advice on women and marriage: From Plautus to Chaucer. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty
(1987) In other worlds: Essays in cultural politics. London and New York: Methuen.
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty
(1988) Can the subaltern speak? In Cary Nelson and Larry Grossberg (Eds.), Marxism and the interpretation of culture (pp. 271–313) .Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty
(1999) A critique of postcolonial reason: Towards a history of the vanishing present. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press.
Spivak, Gyatri Chakravorty
(1987) Subaltern studies: Deconstruction historiography. In Gyatri Chakravorty Spivak, In other worlds: Essays in cultural politics (pp. 197–221). London and New York: Methuen.
Spivak, Gyatri Chakravorty
(1990) The post-colonial critic: Interviews, strategies, dialogues. Ed. Sarah Harasym. London and New York: Routledge.
Sprachman, Paul
(2012) Licensed fool: The damnable, foul-mouthed Obeyd-e Zakani. Costa Mesa, California: Mazda Publishers.
Stewart, Craig O.
(2013) Strategies of verbal irony in visual satire: Reading the New Yorker’s “politics of fear” cover. Humor: International journal of humor research, 26(2), 197–217.
Storr, Anthony
(2001) Freud: A very short introduction. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
Stronks, Els
(2010) Literature and the shaping of religious identities: The case of the protestant religious emblem in the Dutch republic. History of religions, 49(3), 219–253.
Swift, Jonathan
(1729) A modest proposal. Dublin: S. Harding. Retrieved at May 28, 2015 from [URL].
Swift, Jonathan
(1965a) A tale of a tub with other early works 1696–1707. Vol. 1. Ed. Herbert Davis. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Swift, Jonathan
(1965b) The drapier’s letters to the people of Ireland against receiving Wood’s halfpence. Ed. Herbert Davis. London: Oxford University Press.
Swift, Jonathan
(2005) Gulliver’s travels. Edited with an introduction by Claude Rawson and notes by Ian Higgins. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
Swift, Jonathan
(2006) The lady’s dressing room. In Greenblatt, Stephen, et al. (Eds.), Norton anthology of English literature, 8th ed., Vol. 1 (pp. 2590–2593). New York and London: W. W. Norton and Company.
Taʾdīb al-Nisvān
[Disciplining women] 1882–1886 Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Taʾdīb al-Nisvān
[Disciplining women] 1896 Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Taels, Johan
(2011) Humour as practical wisdom. In Hans Geybels and Walter van Herck (Eds.), Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities (pp. 22–34). London and New York: Continuum.
Tajfel, Henri, and John C. Turner
(1986) The social identity theory of intergroup behavior. In Stephen Worchel and William G. Austin (Eds.), Psychology of intergroup relations (pp. 7–24). Chicago: Nelson-Hall, Publishers.
Test, George A.
(1991) Satire: Spirit and art. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
The Koran
(2006) Trans. N. J. Dawood. London and New York: Penguin
Thurschwell, Pamela
(2000) Sigmund Freud. London and New York: Routledge.
Titze, Michael
(2009) Gelotophobia: The fear of being laughed at. Humor: International journal of humor research, 22(1/2), 27–48.
Türkkan, Sevinç
(2011) Other/alterity. In Gregory Castle (Ed.), The encyclopedia of literary and cultural theory, Vol. I (pp. 369–372), Malden, M.A.: Wiley-Blackwell.
Twark, Jill E.
(2007) Humor, satire and identity: Eastern German literature in the 1990s. Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter.
Van Herck, Walter
(2011) Humour, religion and vulnerability. In Hans Geybels and Walter van Herck (Eds.), Humour and religion: Challenges and ambiguities (pp. 191–203). London and New York: Continuum.
Veale, Tony
(2004) Incongruity in humor: Root cause or epiphenomenon?Humor: International journal of humor research, 17(4), 419–428.
Veatch, Thomas C.
(1998) A theory of humor. Humor: International journal of humor research, 11(2), 161–215.
Veeser, H. Aram
(2010) Edward Said: The charisma of criticism. London and New York: Routledge.
Velten, Hans Rudolf
(2009) Laughing at the body: Approaches to a performative theory of humor. Journal of literary theory, 3(2), 353–374.
Viana, Amadeu
(2010) Asymmetry in script opposition. Humor: International journal of humor research, 23(4), 505–526.
Ward, James
(2010) Brass money and wooden shoes: Transmuting anti-Catholic rhetoric in Swift’s “drapier’s letters.”Eighteenth-century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr, 25, 82–97.
Weaver, Simon
(2010) Developing a rhetorical analysis of racist humour: Examining anti-black jokes on the internet. Social semiotics, 20(5), 537–555.
Wedeen, Lisa
(2013) Ideology and humor in dark times: Notes from Syria. Critical inquiry, 39, 841–873.
Westwood, Robert I., and Allanah Johnston
(2013) Humor in organization: From function to resistance. Humor: International journal of humor research, 26(2), 219–247.
Williams, III, George Willis
(2012) Irony as the birth of Kierkegaard’s ‘‘single individual’’ and the beginning of politics. Toronto journal of theology, 28(2), 309–318.
Wilson, Janet, Cristina Şandru, and Sarah Lawson Welsh
(2010) Rerouting the postcolonial: New directions for the new millennium. London and New York: Routledge.
Wisker, Gina
(2007) Key concepts in postcolonial literature. Basingtoke, Hampshire and New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig
(2009) Philosophical investigations. Revised edition. Trans. G. E. M. Anscombe, P. M. S. Hacker and Joachim. West Sussex: Blackwell.
Wittig, Monique
(2007) One is not born a woman. In David H. Richter (Ed.), The critical tradition: Classic texts and contemporary trends, 3rd ed. (pp. 1637–1642). Boston and New York: Bedfordist/St. Martin’s.
Wokler, Robert
(1996) Todorov’s otherness. New literary history, 27(1), 43–55.
Wright, Benjamin
(2011) “Why would you do that, Larry?”: Identity formation and humor in curb your enthusiasm. The journal of popular culture, 44(3), 660–677.
Young, Robert J. C.
(2004) White mythologies. 2nd ed. London and New York: Routledge.
Young, Robert J. C.
(2012) Postcolonial remains. New literary history, 43(1), 19–42.
Zach, Wolfgang
(2000) Jonathan Swift and colonialism. The Canadian journal of Irish studies, 26(1), 36–46.
Zakani, Obeyd
(2008) Ethics of the aristocrats and other satirical works. Trans. Hasan Javadi. Washington, D.C.: Mage.
Zākānī, ʿUbayd
(1999) Kullīyāt-i ʿUbayd-i Zākānī [Collected works of ʿUbayd-i Zākānī]. Ed. Mohammad-Jaʿfar Mahjoub. New York: Bibliotheca Persica Press.
Zekavat, Massih
(2010) A comparative study of satire in ‘Ubayd Zākānī and Jonathan Swift. M.A. thesis. Shiraz University.
Zekavat, Massih
(2013) World literatures in secondary school curricula in Iran. CLCWeb: Comparative literature and culture, 15(6), .
Zekavat, Massih
(2014) A discursive model of satire. JESELL (Jena Electronic Studies in English Language and Literature), 1–18. Retrieved at July 3, 2015 from [URL].
Zekavat, Massih
(2015) Essentialism as a strategy to subvert patriarchy in four myths of creation. In Monique Ferrell and Julian Williams (Eds.), Looking for the enemy: The eternal internal gender wars of our sisters (pp. 165–178). Dubuque: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company.