Abstract
Despite humor’s promise as an educational tool in language learning contexts, questions of appropriateness, cultural sensitivity, and student expectations cannot be ignored. This is especially the case in a culture such as Japan where the time and place for humor is often dictated by the social norms of “warai no ba” or “laughter places.” In order to better understand the role of humor from the Japanese language learner’s perspective, the researchers conducted a survey of 918 university students across Japan to elicit their views on such areas as the importance of humor for language learning and proficiency as well as its significance in understanding cultural differences. Quantitative and qualitative analyses of the results indicate that most participants strongly favored inclusion of humor as part of the classroom experience but that cultural differences must be carefully considered by instructors. Furthermore, while variables such as gender and academic discipline did not have a significant effect on the results, the English proficiency of the participants did, with more proficient learners indicating a greater degree of comfort and cultural understanding from use of in-class humor than those with lesser ability.
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© 2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Performing rebelliousness: Dutch political humor in the 1780s
- Japanese perceptions of humor in the English language classroom
- Punches or punchlines? Honor, face, and dignity cultures encourage different reactions to provocation
- The influence of humor and amusement on mother-adolescent sexual communication
- Book Reviews
- Manuel Garin: El gag visual. De Buster Keaton a Super Mario
- Rea, Christopher.: The age of irreverence: A new history of laughter in China
- Brodie, Ian.: A vulgar art: A new approach to stand-up comedy
- Swick, David and Richard Keeble: The funniest pages: International perspectives on humor in journalism
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Performing rebelliousness: Dutch political humor in the 1780s
- Japanese perceptions of humor in the English language classroom
- Punches or punchlines? Honor, face, and dignity cultures encourage different reactions to provocation
- The influence of humor and amusement on mother-adolescent sexual communication
- Book Reviews
- Manuel Garin: El gag visual. De Buster Keaton a Super Mario
- Rea, Christopher.: The age of irreverence: A new history of laughter in China
- Brodie, Ian.: A vulgar art: A new approach to stand-up comedy
- Swick, David and Richard Keeble: The funniest pages: International perspectives on humor in journalism