The Funniest Pages
International Perspectives on Humor in Journalism
Becker, Lee B. / Swick, David / Keeble, Richard Lance
Erschienen am
30.03.2016, Auflage: 1. Auflage
Inhalt
Contents: David Swick/Richard Lance Keeble: Journalism - So Often Funnier than Fiction – Nicholas Brownlees: News Mockery in the English Civil War and Interregnum Press – Dean Jobb: «Written with Powers Truly Comick»: Joseph Addison, Richard Steele and the Birth of Social and Political Satire – Ben Stubbs: Travel Writing and Humor: From Dickens and Twain to the Present Day – Mary M. Cronin: Sifting Comic Wheat from Western Chaff: Alex E. Sweet, John Armoy Knox, and the Humor
of the American West – Mark J. Noonan: Howling Mad:
Magazine, Allen Ginsberg, and the Culture Wars of the 1950s – David Swick: Comedy in Tragedy: Humor in the Literary Journalism of James Cameron – Hendrik Michael: Words! Wisdom! Gibberish!: Verbal Irony in
– Antonio Castillo:
: Satirizing and Interrogating Power in post-Pinochet Chile – Carolyn Rickett: Deadly Funny: How John Diamond Used Humor to Tackle the Taboo Subjects of Cancer and Dying – James Waller-Davies: «Common sense dancing»: Clive James’s Invention of the Television Column as a Comic Genre – Matthew Ricketson: John Clarke and the Power of Satire in Journalism – Rob Steen: A Sporting Chance: Fun and Failure - Both On and Off the Field – Dermot Heaney: Bowling Them Over and Over with Wit: Forms and Functions of Humor in Live Text Cricket Coverage – Sue Joseph: Harmer, Humor and
: In the Vanguard of Australian Female Comedy – Asif Hameed: Speaking Truth to Power in 140 Characters or Less: Political Satire, Civic Engagement and Journalism – Blake Lambert: Twitter and the Revitalization of Black Humor in Journalism – Kevin M. Lerner: How
, the Iconic Satirical Magazine of the 1980s, Invented Contemporary Snark, and How Internet Journalism Has Misappropriated It – Richard Lance Keeble and David Swick: Putting Fun into the Curriculum.