Publications
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.
Kornienko, Alla. 2021. Linguistic ridicule as a reflection of the confrontation between the political power and society. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 129–135.
Kobzieva, Iuliia , Iia Gordiienko-Mytrofanova, Maryna Udovenko and Serhii Sauta. 2020. Concept “humour” in the linguistic consciousness of the Russian-speaking population of Ukraine. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (1) : 29–44.
Sekyi-Baidoo, Yaw . 2020. Post-climax analysis in toli—the Ghanaian humorous tale. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (2) : 68–86.
Villy, Tsakona. 2020. Scrutinising intertextuality in humour: Moving beyond cultural literacy and towards critical literacy. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 40–59.
Cendra, Anastasia Nelladia. 2019. Gender stereotypes depicted in online sexist jokes. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (2) : 44–66.
Chen, Xinren. 2019. “You're a nuisance!”: “Patch-up” jocular abuse in Chinese fiction. Journal of Pragmatics 139 : 52–63.
Chłopicki, Władysław. 2019. What do doctors advise patients in jokes and why? Humor 32 (3) : 475–498.
Brzozowska, Dorota and Władysław Chłopicki. 2019. The Chinese as targets in Polish humorous discourse. Humor 32 (2) : 235–266.
Chovanec, Jan. 2019. Early Titanic Jokes: A disaster for the theory of disaster jokes? Humor 32 (2) : 201–226.
Hall, Kira. 2019. Middle class timelines: Ethnic humor and sexual modernity in Delhi. Language in Society 48 (4) : 491–517.
Matwick, Keri and Kelsi Matwick. 2019. Humor and Performing Gender on TV Cooking Shows. Humor 32 (1) : 125–146.
Mifdal, Mohamed. 2019. Breaking frame and frame-shifting in Bassem Youssef’s satirical tv show al-Bern?meg. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (2) : 30–43.
Mihas, Elena. 2019. Gender-switching strategies in the activity of tsinampantsi ‘joking’ among Northern Kampa Arawaks of Peru. International Journal of Language and Culture 6 (1) : 119–147.
Niketić, Predrag . 2019. Conceptual blending in English and Serbian question-and-answer jokes: Cultural transfer issues. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (4) : 106–124.
Nixon, James. 2019. “You Think I'm Joking”: Examining the Weaponized Comedy of President Obama's Stand-Up Addresses at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. Studies in American Humor 5 (1) : 103–123.
Nwankwo E., Izuu. 2019. Incongruous liaisons: Routes of humour, insult and political (in)correctness in Nigerian stand-up jokes. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (2) : 100–115.
Oring, Elliot. 2019. Oppositions, overlaps, and ontologies: The general theory of verbal humor revisited. Humor 32 (2) : 151–170.
Palmieri, Giacinto. 2019. Between cant and Kant: Christie Davies and the (im?)possibility of seriousness in humor studies. Humor 32 (2) : 195–200.