Article published In: Pragmatics & Cognition
Vol. 18:2 (2010) ► pp.397–421
Irony is critical
Published online: 13 August 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.18.2.07gar
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.18.2.07gar
Irony is acknowledged to be usually critical: the ironic speaker tends to exhibit an apparent positive attitude in order to communicate a negative valuation. The reverse is considered to be also possible though: the ironic speaker can praise by apparent blaming, although it seldom happens. This unbalance between the two sorts of ironic examples is the so-called asymmetry issue of irony. Here I shall deny the possibility of being ironic without criticizing — hence the asymmetry issue is an illusion. By claiming that irony is always critical I suggest an even stronger claim: criticism is what distinguishes irony from the similar phenomenon of metaphor.
Keywords: criticism, implicature, metaphor, irony, non-literalness
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