In:The Dynamics of Interactional Humor: Creating and negotiating humor in everyday encounters
Edited by Villy Tsakona and Jan Chovanec
[Topics in Humor Research 7] 2018
► pp. 257–282
Chapter 11On-line humorous representations of the 2015 Greek national elections
Acting and interacting about politics on social media
Published online: 5 January 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/thr.7.11pia
https://doi.org/10.1075/thr.7.11pia
Abstract
The recent development of social media platforms has given rise to new forms of digital communication in which humor seems to play a prominent role. This chapter is concerned with humor in such a newly emerged, mediated genre, so-called internet memes
(i.e. units of image, text, animation, and/or sound spread through the internet), focusing on the memes generated, disseminated, and commented upon on Facebook after the Greek national elections in January 2015. This chapter examines memes along with the responses posted by Facebook users, showing that, being humorous themselves, internet memes enact mimetic responses that are also humorous. This line of research aims to do justice to the interactional aspect of meme-based humor not previously acknowledged in the literature.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Internet memes and political humor
- 3.The theoretical framework
- 4.The data
- 5.The analysis of the data
- 6.Concluding remarks
Acknowledgements Notes References
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Xie, Chaoqun, Francisco Yus & Hartmut Haberland
2021. Introduction. In Approaches to Internet Pragmatics [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 318], ► pp. 1 ff.
Piata, Anna
Piata, Anna
2022. Stylistic humor across modalities. In The Pragmatics of Internet Memes [Benjamins Current Topics, 120], ► pp. 36 ff.
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
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