This book was shortlisted for the 2015 BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize. Comedy is currently enjoying unprecedented growth within the British culture industries. Defying the recent economic downturn, it has exploded into a booming billion-pound industry both on TV and on the live circuit. Despite this, academia has either ignored comedy or focused solely on analysing comedians or comic texts. This scholarship tends to assume that through analysing an artist’s intentions or techniques, we can somehow understand what is and what isn’t funny. But this poses a fundamental question – funny to whom? How can we definitively discern how audiences react to comedy? Comedy and Distinction shifts the focus to provide the first ever empirical examination of British comedy taste. Drawing on a large-scale survey and in-depth interviews carried out at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the book explores what types of comedy people like (and dislike), what their preferences reveal about their sense of humour, how comedy taste lubricates everyday interaction, and how issues of social class, gender, ethnicity and geographical location interact with patterns of comic taste. Friedman asks: Are some types of comedy valued higher than others in British society? Does more ‘legitimate’ comedy taste act as a tangible resource in social life – a form of cultural capital? What role does humour play in policing class boundaries in contemporary Britain? This book will be of interest to students and scholars of sociology, social class, social theory, cultural studies and comedy studies.
These seemingly timeless genres are as popular today as ever! This book takes a closer look at the precise meanings of the terms screwball and romantic.
Skeggs, Bev. “The Making of Class and Gender through Visualizing Moral Subject Formation.” Sociology 39 (2005): 965–982. Small, Mario. “Culture, Cohorts, and Social Organization Theory: Understanding Local Participation in a Latino ...
- Taken literally, the term humor is borrowed from the Latin, according to Wilfred Funk, the author of Word Origins and Their Romantic Stories.
... We All Want To Change the World. London: Lawrence and Wishart. Available at. https://www.lwbooks.co.uk/book/weall-want-change-world. Hakim, Jamie, and Alison Winch. 2016. ''I'm selling the dream really aren't I?': Sharing Fit Male ...
Examines differences in taste between modern French classes, discusses the relationship between culture and politics, and outlines the strategies of pretension.
Whilst this is clearly an obscure biblical text, elements of contemporary culture lend further humor to the scene. A bucket of petrol and a box of Bryant and May matches attempt to demonstrate how this feat might be achieved in ...
When the World Laughs is a book about the intersection of humor, history, and culture.
Isn’t That Clever provides a new account of the nature of humor – the cleverness account – according to which humor is intentional conspicuous acts of playful cleverness.
Does humour make us human, or do the cats and dogs laugh along with us? On Humour is a fascinating, beautifully written and funny book on what humour can tell us about being human.
The association of humor with alcohol is undiminished and taken for granted and the pub still counts as the most ... by becoming humor with a message or moralizing humor, humor with an esthetically responsible design or refined humor, ...