In:The Pragmatics of Humour in Interactive Contexts
Edited by Esther Linares Bernabéu
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 335] 2023
► pp. 173–198
Humour at the opening and closing phases of service encounters in small cafeterias and bars in Seville
Comparing the morning and evening segments
Published online: 24 May 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.335.08cru
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.335.08cru
Abstract
In an interactive context like service encounters, humour
becomes essential because of the positive feelings that it
generates. These contribute to an amicable ambiance and tighten
bonds of union. Hence, humour greatly impacts customer satisfaction,
revisit intention and, ultimately, customer loyalty. Although
individual skills and sense of humour come into play, awareness of
the role of humour often prompts many baristas and customers to use
it in their transactions. Its various forms and functions in
distinct service encounters have already received some attention,
but its use at the opening and closing phases of these encounters
with a phatic purpose still remains an underexplored issue. This
chapter will compare data from two previous studies in order to
determine the types of humour wherewith such encounters were opened
and closed at small establishments in Seville. It aims to ascertain
how humorous tokens achieved proximity and strengthened social
relationships, and to elucidate whether their use to create phatic
communion was affected by factors like the interlocutors’ age and
the time segment when the encounters took place.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Phatic communion and humour
- 3.Humour in service encounters
- 4.Methodology
- 4.1The establishments
- 4.2The participants
- 4.3Data collection
- 4.4Data analysis
- 5.Results
- 5.1General findings
- 5.2The morning encounters
- 5.3The evening encounters
- 6.Discussion
- 7.Conclusion
Notes References
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