In:Irony in Language Use and Communication
Edited by Angeliki Athanasiadou and Herbert L. Colston
[Figurative Thought and Language 1] 2017
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 14 December 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.1.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.1.toc
Table of contents
Editors and contributors
VII
Foreword
IX
IntroductionThe irony of irony
1
Editors
Herbert L. Colston
Angeliki Athanasiadou
Part I.Interdisciplinary perspectives on irony
Chapter 1.Irony performance and perception: What underlies verbal, situational and other ironies?
19
Herbert L. Colston
Chapter 2.How does irony arise in experience?
43
Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr.
Patrawat Samermit
Chapter 3.In defense of an ecumenical approach to irony
61
Robert Willison
Part II.Irony, thought and (media) communication
Chapter 4.Introducing a three-dimensional model of verbal irony: Irony in language, in thought, and in communication
87
Christian Burgers
Gerard J. Steen
Chapter 5On ironic puns in Portuguese authentic oral data: How does multiple meaning make irony work?
109
Hanna J. Batoréo
Chapter 6.Irony and sarcasm in follow-ups of metaphorical slogans
127
Andreas Musolff
Part III.Approaches to verbal irony
Chapter 7.Irony, pretense and fictively-elaborating hyperbole
145
John A. Barnden
Chapter 8.Cognitive modeling and irony
179
Francisco José Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez
Chapter 9.Irony has a metonymic basis
201
Angeliki Athanasiadou
Part IV.Approaches to studying irony
Chapter 10.Defaultness shines while affirmation pales: On idioms, sarcasm, and pleasure
219
Rachel Giora
Dalia Meytes
Ariela Tamir
Shir Givoni
Vered Heruti
Ofer Fein
Chapter 11.The standard experimental approach to the study of irony: Let us not be hasty in throwing out the baby with the bathwater
237
Albert Katz
Chapter 12.Investigating sarcasm comprehension using eye-tracking during reading: What are the roles of literality, familiarity, and echoic mention?
255
Alexandra Turcan
Ruth Filik
Index
277
