On sarcasm, social awareness, and gender

被引:16
|
作者
Drucker, Ari [1 ]
Fein, Ofer [2 ]
Bergerbest, Dafna [2 ]
Giora, Rachel [1 ]
机构
[1] Tel Aviv Univ, IL-69978 Tel Aviv, Israel
[2] Acad Coll Tel Aviv Yaffo, Tel Aviv, Israel
来源
HUMOR-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMOR RESEARCH | 2014年 / 27卷 / 04期
基金
以色列科学基金会;
关键词
sarcasm; irony; gender; humor; feminism; social awareness; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; CONVERSATIONAL JOKING; AMBIVALENT SEXISM; HUMOR; IRONY; LAUGHTER; COMPREHENSION; APPRECIATION; DIFFERENCE; CREATIVITY;
D O I
10.1515/humor-2014-0092
中图分类号
H [语言、文字];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
Sarcastic irony, uttered in four (within and between) gender-based settings, is used here as a tool to diagnose affective attitudes toward women. The kind of sarcasm tested here is an aggressive type of humor, whereby a speaker derides another individual, turning her or him into the victim of the humorous-utterance. Finding this kind of irony less or more pleasing allows indexing between-and within-group attitudes. Participants were overall nonsexist, scoring low on sexism scales, but male participants were still more sexist than female participants. Results show that, as predicted by Ariel and Giora (1998), female participants fully adopted a feminine point of view, enjoying sarcastic irony best when it was directed by women at men and least when it was directed by women at women. Being more sexist, our male participants adopted a feminine point of view only partially, enjoying sarcastic irony more when directed at men than directed at women, regardless of the speaker's gender.
引用
收藏
页码:551 / 573
页数:23
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