In:The Pragmatics of Humour in Interactive Contexts
Edited by Esther Linares Bernabéu
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 335] 2023
► pp. v–vi
Published online: 24 May 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.335.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.335.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
1
Part I.Interactional humour on digital settings
5Interpreting Covid-related memes: The role of inferential strategies and context
accessibility
6
Francisco Yus
Carmen Maíz-Arévalo
Political-electoral memes and interactional humour on Twitter
32
Ana Pano Alamán
Ana Mancera Rueda
From mode adoption to saluting a dead kitten: Reactions to a humorous
tweet by Ricky Gervais 65
tweet by Ricky Gervais 65
Luca Bischetti
Salvatore Attardo
‘This girl is on fire!’: Interactional humour in YouTube comments on the Notre Dame
disaster
87
Jan Chovanec
Villy Tsakona
Part II.Conversational humour in everyday interactions
Epistemics and conversational humour in intercultural first
conversations
110
Amir Sheikhan
Michael Haugh
Humor negotiation in interactional sequences in Spanish
133
Leonor Ruiz-Gurillo
Communicative strategies in interactional male humour: A study of (im)politeness
152
M. Belén Alvarado Ortega
Humour at the opening and closing phases of service encounters
in small cafeterias and bars in Seville: Comparing the morning and evening segments 173
in small cafeterias and bars in Seville: Comparing the morning and evening segments 173
Manuel Padilla Cruz
Part III.Interactional humour in fictional settings
199Co-constructing humour and gender identity in live stand-up
comedy
200
Esther Linares Bernabéu
Fictional interaction in children’s humorous narratives
217
Larissa Timofeeva-Timofeev
Index
239
