Good Humor, Bad Taste: A Sociology of the Joke

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Walter de Gruyter, Dec 22, 2011 - Humor - 301 pages

Good Humor, Bad Taste is the first extensive sociological study of the relationship between humor and social background. Using a combination of interview materials, survey data, and historical materials, the book explores the relationship between humor and gender, age, regional background, and especially, humor and social class in the Netherlands. The final chapter focuses on national differences, exploring the differences between the American and the Dutch sense of humor, again using a combination of interview and survey materials.

The starting point for this exploration of differences in sense of humor is one specific humorous genre: the joke. The joke is not a very prestigious genre; in the Netherlands even less so than in the US. It is precisely this lack of status that made it a good starting point for asking questions about humor and taste. Interviewees generally had very pronounced opinions about the genre, calling jokes "their favorite kind humor", but also "completely devoid of humor" and "a form of intellectual poverty". Good Humor, Bad Taste attempts to explain why jokes are good humor to some, bad taste to others.

The focus on this one genre enables Good Humor, Bad Taste to have a very wide scope. The book not only covers the appreciation and evaluation of jokes by different social groups and in different cultures, and its relationship with wider humor styles. It also describes the genre itself: the history of the genre, its decline in status from the sixteenth century onward, and the way the topics and the tone of jokes have changed over the last fifty years of the twentieth century.

 

Contents

Jokes humor and taste
1
Part I Style and social background
21
Genesis of an oral genre
21
Chapter 3 Joke telling as communication style
40
Class age and humor styles
68
Chapter 5 The logic of humor styles
99
Part II Taste and quality
119
Dutch joke culture
120
Part III Comparing humor styles
195
Joke telling and social background in the United States
195
Sociology and the joke
229
The jokes used in the Dutch survey
249
Dutch humorists and television programs
256
Notes
262
References
269
Index
286

Chapter 7 Temptation and transgression
148
Chapter 8 Sense and sociability
170

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About the author (2011)

Giselinde Kuipers, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.