ABSTRACT

The broad aim of this lively and engaging book is to examine relationships between the linguistic patterns, the stylistic functions, and the social and cultural contexts of humour. The material used in illustration is of corresponding breadth: schoolyard jokes, graffiti, aphorisms, advertisements, arguments, anecdotes, puns, parodies, passages of comic fiction, all come under Dr Nash's scrutiny.

chapter One|12 pages

Explaining the joke

chapter Three|28 pages

The design of the joke

(i) Locative formulae

chapter Four|20 pages

The design of the joke

(ii) The outgrowth of anecdote

chapter Five|29 pages

Allusion and parody

chapter Six|21 pages

Likelihoods and logics

chapter Seven|31 pages

Language in its humour

(i) Manipulations of meaning

chapter Eight|18 pages

Language in its humour

(ii) The staging of recitals