Abstract
This study examines a commonly held belief, left over from psychoanalytic theories of humor as a coping mechanism, that relationships with parents strongly influence comedians' temperaments and career choices. Thirty one professional stand-up comedians and 400 students completed the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI), which concerns recollected parental care and protectiveness, and a new self-report questionnaire that measures popularity and humor use among peers during adolescence. Results show that comedians' parents did not differ from students' parents in care or protectiveness, and comedians did not differ from students in adolescent popularity, but comedians did use more humor among adolescent peers (were more likely to be class clowns, make fun of others, laugh at themselves, and be the butt of jokes). The results suggest that stand-up comedians do not differ much from ordinary college students in their parental or adolescence peer relationships.
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Satire and definition
- The Aristocrats!: Comedy, grotesqueries and political inversions of the masculine code
- Disclosure humor and distortion humor: A reversal theory analysis
- Humor support in synchronous computer-mediated classroom discussions
- Humor perception in bilinguals: Is language more than a code?
- Humor use in power-differentiated interactions
- Childhood experiences of professional comedians: Peer and parent relationships and humor use
- Book Reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Satire and definition
- The Aristocrats!: Comedy, grotesqueries and political inversions of the masculine code
- Disclosure humor and distortion humor: A reversal theory analysis
- Humor support in synchronous computer-mediated classroom discussions
- Humor perception in bilinguals: Is language more than a code?
- Humor use in power-differentiated interactions
- Childhood experiences of professional comedians: Peer and parent relationships and humor use
- Book Reviews