Image for The funniest pages  : international perspectives on humor in journalism

The funniest pages : international perspectives on humor in journalism

Keeble, Richard Lance(Edited by)Swick, David(Edited by)
Part of the Mass Communication & Journalism series
See all formats and editions

Charles Dickens, celebrated novelist and journalist, believed that his greatest ability as a writer was to make people laugh.

Yet, to date, humor has been strangely marginalized in journalism, communication and media studies. This innovative book draws together the work of seventeen writers to show that, starting in the 1640s during the English Civil War, and continuing through to the present time, humor has indeed been an important ingredient of journalism.

Countries studied include Australia, Britain, Canada, Chile and the United States.

The Funniest Pages is divided into four sections: «Seriously Funny, From Past to Present,» «Unsolemn Columnists,» «This Sporting Life» and a final section, «Have Mouse, Will Laugh,» which looks at humor in online journalism.

Chapters examine Joseph Addison, Richard Steele and the birth of social and political satire; Allen Ginsberg, Mad magazine, and the culture wars of the 1950s; John Clarke and the power of satire in journalism, and more.

Read More
Available
£55.76 Save 20.00%
RRP £69.70
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
1433130998 / 9781433130991
Hardback
070.4
30/03/2016
United States
English
xiii, 271 pages
23 cm