How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing

Many excellent jokes can pose potential difficulties for tellers and listeners since they require considerable knowledge of the subject of the joke and have a long and elaborate narrative structure such that only a very skilled joke-teller can do justice to them. In a democratic, fast-moving, plural...

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Main Author: Christie Davies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies 2016-06-01
Series:Półrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/30
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spelling doaj-f363a22034684e1aa533f00fba0602e82021-04-06T14:28:47ZengCracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language StudiesPółrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium2543-78442543-78442016-06-0111 & 225326610.7592/Tertium2016.1.2.Davies28How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and RevealingChristie Davies0University of Reading, United KingdomMany excellent jokes can pose potential difficulties for tellers and listeners since they require considerable knowledge of the subject of the joke and have a long and elaborate narrative structure such that only a very skilled joke-teller can do justice to them. In a democratic, fast-moving, plural, urban world such features can create problems since they mean that on a particular occasion when jokes are being told some of the listeners may miss the point of the joke and others will feel inhibited from telling a joke. Jokes with seemingly pointless endings may likewise disappoint the broad masse, who like clear, well structured jokes with a strong resolution and who may be bored by one that disappears into nonsense. Each of these points will be considered in turn, partly from an analytical point of view and partly in relation to empirical observations of how jokes in the English language have evolved in the course of the twentieth century.https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/30jokesethnicsocial classjewishpoles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christie Davies
spellingShingle Christie Davies
How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
Półrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium
jokes
ethnic
social class
jewish
poles
author_facet Christie Davies
author_sort Christie Davies
title How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
title_short How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
title_full How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
title_fullStr How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
title_full_unstemmed How Jokes Change and May Be Changed: Simplifying, Transforming and Revealing
title_sort how jokes change and may be changed: simplifying, transforming and revealing
publisher Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies
series Półrocznik Językoznawczy Tertium
issn 2543-7844
2543-7844
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Many excellent jokes can pose potential difficulties for tellers and listeners since they require considerable knowledge of the subject of the joke and have a long and elaborate narrative structure such that only a very skilled joke-teller can do justice to them. In a democratic, fast-moving, plural, urban world such features can create problems since they mean that on a particular occasion when jokes are being told some of the listeners may miss the point of the joke and others will feel inhibited from telling a joke. Jokes with seemingly pointless endings may likewise disappoint the broad masse, who like clear, well structured jokes with a strong resolution and who may be bored by one that disappears into nonsense. Each of these points will be considered in turn, partly from an analytical point of view and partly in relation to empirical observations of how jokes in the English language have evolved in the course of the twentieth century.
topic jokes
ethnic
social class
jewish
poles
url https://journal.tertium.edu.pl/index.php/JaK/article/view/30
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