Comprehension of Jokes

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A01=Graeme Ritchie
Assimilation Difficulty
Audience Inference
Author_Graeme Ritchie
belief representation
Category=CFB
Category=CFD
Category=JMR
Character's Viewpoint
Character’s Viewpoint
cognitive effort
cognitive mechanisms in joke understanding
Cognitive Science Framework
Definite Anomaly
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
faulty logic
Final Revelations
FR Model
Full Information Content
humour
Humour Research
humour theory
impropriety
incongruity
incongruity resolution
Joke Analysis
Joke Appreciation
Joke Comprehension
Joke Mechanisms
Joke Teller
Joke World
jokes
Language Interpretation
Linguistic Impropriety
Low Incongruity
Paratelic Mode
pragmatic linguistics
psychological humour mechanisms
Punch Line
Punning Riddles
Relative Anomaly
Sea Scouts
superiority
surprise
text comprehension
text processing models
Textual Jokes
Worth Scales

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367488833
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Feb 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Comprehension of Jokes consolidates and develops the tradition of analysing jokes, by defining a framework of concepts which are suited to capturing what happens when someone understands a joke. The collection of concepts presented improves upon past work on joke analysis, outlining a simple model of text comprehension which supports all the assumptions necessary for a model of joke-understanding. This proposed framework encompasses and integrates a relatively wide range of disparate factors, including incongruity, superiority, and impropriety. Written by an expert in the field of humour, it provides a conceptual basis which will help to map out the landscape of joke comprehension.

The book draws on past suggestions in many areas, primarily philosophy, psychology, linguistics, and artificial intelligence. Current theories of how people understand non-humorous texts offer some important ideas, such as the need for representations of differing beliefs about the world, or the way that predictions may occur during the understanding of a text. The framework improves the clarity and coherence of some existing theoretical proposals and combines these ideas into a well-defined way of describing how a person understands a newly-encountered joke. All this is illustrated using typical textual jokes, some analysed in considerable detail. The book enables hypotheses about why jokes are funny to be stated more precisely and compared more easily, and should contribute to the development of a fuller cognitive model of joke comprehension.

The Comprehension of Jokes will be of great interest to academics and postgraduate students in humour research, as well as those in disciplines like linguistics, psychology, and cognitive science who wish to explore the field of jokes and humour.

Graeme Ritchie began his academic career in artificial intelligence in the 1970s, and for the past twenty-five years has increasingly concentrated on research into humour.

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