Irony: Traditional Verbal Irony
Irony has been studied since at least Classical Greece. There are a few different types of irony, including dramatic irony, where the words or actions of the c...
Irony has been studied since at least Classical Greece. There are a few different types of irony, including dramatic irony, where the words or actions of the c...
A topic on my list of things to cover in this blog are statements of “just kidding” and “I’m joking.” I started on this in my ana...
In my analysis of Mike Birbiglia’s Thank God for Jokes, I included this blurb about how, in an off-hand way, Birbiglia mentions that “Comedy equals ...
In trying to get more organized here (and as I’ve started to get enough material up), the time has come to start creating sub-categories! There are now si...
In a previous post, I discussed a common, simple model of carnivalesque that was based off the idea of a Roman Catholic celebration of Carnival prior to Lent wr...
It’s fairly common, when talking about humor, to use the word carnivalesque (see for instance Fiske; Gilbert; Miller). The concept was most famously used...
I’ve been a fan of Mike Birbiglia for a long time now, bought his merchandise, watched all his specials and both his movies (Sleepwalk with Me, 2012 and D...
Comics are critics One of the premises of my work is that comics are social and cultural critics. Comics frequently operate in a critical mode, and they home in...
Presuppositions, “common sense,” and scripts In proposing Script Theory, a major model seen to support Incongruity theory, Linguist Victor Raskin no...
My problem with a number of different theories is that they assume certain elements of intentionality, which I’ve discussed before as assuming the comic...