Publications
Nikola, Novaković. 2022. “E is for Ernest who choked on a peach”: Food, death, and humourin the works of Edward Gorey. The European Journal of Humour Research 10 (3) : 22–38.
Romero-Reche, Alejandro . 2022. Avant-garde humour as ideological supplement: Francoist propaganda for the unenthusiastic in María de la Hoz (1939). The European Journal of Humour Research 10 (3) : 39–53.
Balakrishnan, Vinod and Snehal P. Sanathanan. 2021. Before the political cartoonist, there was the Vidusaka: The case for an indigenous comic tradition. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 91–109.
Borodenko, Marina and Vadim Petrovsky. 2021. The semiology of humour: Developing the “counter-sign” model. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (2) : 7–25.
Chey, Jocelyn Valerie. 2021. Overcoming awkwardness: Some Chinese interpretations of Australian humour. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 131–151.
Chiaro, Delia and Nikita Lobanov. 2021. Fandom versus citizenship: The “weirdisation” of politics. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (3) : 113–134.
Condren, Conal. 2021. Mapping the contours of humour: Reflections on recent introductory studies. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (3) : 151–161.
Dulebova, Irina and Linda Krajchovichova. 2021. The humorous dimension of intertextual relations in contemporary Slovak creolized media text. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 87–104.
Hale, Adrian. 2021. Dame Edna and ‘the help’: Australian bilingual Latin American immigrants respond to that joke. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 152–172.
Han, Chong and Adrian Hale. 2021. ‘She is like a Yakshini": Character construction via aggressive humour in Chinese sitcom discourse. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 110–130.
Heidari-Shahreza, Mohammad Ali. 2021. Humour-integrated language learning (HILL) in perspective, progress and prospect. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 236–245.
Kholmatov, Aziz . 2021. Exploring teacher-initiated humour in Academic English classes: An Uzbek international university experience. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 221–235.
Konyaeva, Yulia and Anastasiya Samsonova. 2021. Sarcastic evaluation in mass media as a way of discrediting a person: Greta Thunberg case. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 74–86.
Liliya Duskaeva. 2021. Humour as an information resource in the media. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 1–6.
Logi, Lorenzo and Michele Zappavigna. 2021. Impersonated personae: Paralanguage, dialogism and affiliation in stand-up comedy. Humor 34 (3) : 113–138.
Marqués Cobeta, Noelia . 2021. Multilingual humour in audiovisual translation: Modern Family dubbed in Spanish. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 209–220.
Martínez-Cardama, Sara and Fátima García-López. 2021. Ephemeral mimetics: Memes, an X-ray of Covid-19. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 35–73.
Ödmark, Sara . 2021. De-contextualisation fuels controversy:the double-edged sword of humour in a hybrid media environment. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (3) : 49–64.
Orlov, David . 2021. Origins of Bosnian humour and its role during the siege of Sarajevo. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 173–188.
Piirman, Marit and Katrin Saks. 2021. Presenting and perceiving humour in Estonian tourism settings. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (4) : 189–208.
Prikhodko, Maksim . 2021. Irony and heroism: On the fragment of Origen’s treatise “Contra Celsum” 7.53-58. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (2) : 52–62.
Rivin, Daniil and Olga Shcherbakova. 2021. Understanding of comical texts in people with different types of attitudes towards humour: Evidence from Internet memes. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (2) : 112–131.
Ryabova, Galina N. 2021. Humour and satire in everyday life of Soviet society in the 1920s. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 136–154.