Article
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Humor, language, and sex roles in American culture
-
Don Nilsen
Published/Copyright:
May 29, 2015
Published Online: 2015-5-29
Published in Print: 1987-1-1
© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Semantic and pragmatic theories of humor
- Linguistic heuristics of humor: a script-based semantic approach
- Pragmatics of humorous language
- Humor and language attitudes
- Language, identity and ethnic jokes about stupidity
- The social significance of Scottish dialect humor
- Humor and language in sociocultural context
- Humor, language, and sex roles in American culture
- Humor, linguistic ambiguity, and disputing in a Guyanese community
- Application of humor theories to folklore
- A pattern of verbal irony in Chinookan
- Reviews
- Review of Elliott Oring (ed.): Humor and the Individual
- Review of W.J. Pepicello and T. A. Green: The Language of Riddles: New Perspectives
- Review of Victor Raskin: Semantic Mechanisms of Humor
- Books and journals received
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Semantic and pragmatic theories of humor
- Linguistic heuristics of humor: a script-based semantic approach
- Pragmatics of humorous language
- Humor and language attitudes
- Language, identity and ethnic jokes about stupidity
- The social significance of Scottish dialect humor
- Humor and language in sociocultural context
- Humor, language, and sex roles in American culture
- Humor, linguistic ambiguity, and disputing in a Guyanese community
- Application of humor theories to folklore
- A pattern of verbal irony in Chinookan
- Reviews
- Review of Elliott Oring (ed.): Humor and the Individual
- Review of W.J. Pepicello and T. A. Green: The Language of Riddles: New Perspectives
- Review of Victor Raskin: Semantic Mechanisms of Humor
- Books and journals received