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引用次数: 0
摘要
在社交媒体上充斥着有关新冠肺炎疫情的严肃帖子时,幽默帖子给用户带来了急需的喘息。本文从Science Direct、Scopus、Taylor & Francis和Web of Science四个数据库中选择了42篇研究文章,对基于社交媒体的COVID-19幽默进行了研究。在对文章的一些关键特征进行分类和分析之后,对研究结果进行了详细的描述和讨论。关于COVID-19幽默的特征和功能的研究结果表明,大多数研究都是研究图像-文本模因;最重要的特征是“幽默”,此外还有讽刺、反讽、讽刺、批评、并置和局部性。互文性在幽默文章的结构中起着重要的作用,特别是与特定国家有关的幽默文章。此外,它表明,尽管关于社交媒体上COVID-19幽默的研究仍处于早期阶段,但在本综述中包括的各种研究中,一些发现似乎是稳定的。此外,研究的大多数幽默不仅是关于病毒或疾病本身,而且还关注人们因大流行和随后的封锁而陷入的荒谬境地。
Amid the deluge of serious social media posts regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, humorous posts brought users much-needed respite. This article reviews studies on social media-based COVID-19 humour in 42 research articles that were selected from four databases, viz. Science Direct, Scopus, Taylor & Francis, and Web of Science. After the classification and analysis of the articles on the basis of some key features, a detailed description and discussion of the findings have been carried out. The results concerning the characteristics and functions of COVID-19 humour reveal that most studies investigated image-text memes; the most important feature found was ‘humour,’ in addition to others like sarcasm, irony, satire, criticism, juxtaposition, and locality. Intertextuality played a significant role in the structure of humorous posts, especially those related to specific countries. Additionally, it shows that although research on COVID-19 humour on social media is still in an early phase, several findings appear stable across various studies included in this review. Moreover, most humour studied is not only about the virus or the disease itself, but also focuses on absurd situations individuals found themselves in due to the pandemic and the lockdown that followed.
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.