In:Humor in Interaction
Edited by Neal R. Norrick and Delia Chiaro
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 182] 2009
► pp. 79–98
Multimodal and intertextual humor in the media reception situation
The case of watching football on TV
Published online: 3 July 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.182.04ger
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.182.04ger
Based on natural data from media reception, the talk of television viewers watching football matches is analysed with regards to humor. Remarks on television are often greeted by (shared) laugher of the fans. However, laughter as such does not necessarily indicate humor. Instead, the celebrating fans also often laugh after goals. Principally, the fans appropriate the media text humorously either by multimodally referring to the pictures on the screen or by intertextually hinging their talk on the televised language. Formally, second person pronouns or sequences co-constructed with the sports announcers are used. Functionally, humor marks the activity as leisure. It helps the viewers negotiate world-views serving as contextualisation cue in the interpretation of the media text.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Simarro Vázquez, María, Nabiha El Khatib, Phillip Hamrick & Salvatore Attardo
2021. On the order of processing of humorous tweets with visual and verbal elements. Internet Pragmatics 4:1 ► pp. 150 ff.
[no author supplied]
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