‘Are we laughing at the same?’

Q2 Social Sciences European Journal of Humour Research Pub Date : 2023-03-28 DOI:10.7592/ejhr.2023.11.1.720
Iveta Žákovská, Carmen Maíz-Arévalo, Ying Cao
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Abstract

Humour is often employed as a coping mechanism, with therapeutic effects on those producing and receiving it (Christopher 2015; Samson & Gross 2012). This buffering effect of humour might explain why, at the time of an international pandemic like Covid-19, human beings, independently of their cultural origin, have resorted to humour as a means of alleviating uncertainty and fear, and of enhancing feelings of connection and bonding with others. The proliferation of Covid-related humour has also led to a wide range of studies, with special attention to memes. However, contrastive studies are more limited, especially those comparing very different languages and cultural realities such as the Chinese, the Czech and the Spanish ones. This paper aims to redress this imbalance by analysing a corpus of 300 Covid-memes (100 memes per language). More specifically, we intend to answer the following questions: (i) what dimension(s) of humour are predominant in each language? (ii) what actors do the memes in the three countries target? and (iii) to what extent can these preferences relate to cultural differences/similarities? Applying a mixed-method approach, results show that there seems to be a global preference for affiliative humour while aggressive (and self-deprecating) humour appears to be more culturally bound, with a higher frequency in the Czech and Spanish datasets in contrast to the Chinese one. Likewise, the Czech and Spanish dataset share a significantly higher number of common frames, which might be pointing to a more European, Western type of humour in comparison to the Chinese approach (Jiang et al. 2019).
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“我们也在笑吗?”
幽默通常被用作一种应对机制,对产生和接受幽默的人有治疗作用(Christopher 2015;Samson & Gross, 2012)。幽默的这种缓冲作用或许可以解释,为什么在像Covid-19这样的国际大流行期间,人类(无论其文化起源如何)都将幽默作为缓解不确定性和恐惧的手段,并加强与他人的联系和纽带感。与新冠病毒相关的幽默的激增也引发了广泛的研究,特别关注表情包。然而,对比研究比较有限,特别是那些比较非常不同的语言和文化现实的研究,如汉语、捷克语和西班牙语。本文旨在通过分析300个covid -meme(每种语言100个meme)的语料库来纠正这种不平衡。更具体地说,我们打算回答以下问题:(i)每种语言中幽默的哪个方面占主导地位?(ii)这三个国家的模因针对的是哪些行为者?(iii)这些偏好在多大程度上与文化差异/相似有关?采用混合方法的方法,结果表明,似乎全球都倾向于亲和力幽默,而攻击性幽默(和自嘲)似乎更受文化的限制,与中国的数据集相比,捷克和西班牙的数据集频率更高。同样,捷克和西班牙的数据集共享的共同框架数量要多得多,与中国的方法相比,这可能意味着更欧洲化、西方式的幽默(Jiang et al. 2019)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
European Journal of Humour Research
European Journal of Humour Research Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Humour Research (EJHR) is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal with an international multidisciplinary editorial board. Although geographically-oriented towards the ˋold continentˊ, the European perspective aims at an international readership and contributors. EJHR covers the full range of work being done on all aspects of humour phenomenon. EJHR is designed to respond to the important changes that have affected the study of humour but particular predominance is given to the past events and current developments in Europe.
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