Description

Book Synopsis
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.

Trade Review
«Although at times one yearns for a few more jokes to leaven the analysis, this is serious and useful survey of the uses of humour in journalism.»
(James Hollings, Pacific Journalism Review 24/2 2018)

Table of Contents
Contents: David Swick/Richard Lance Keeble: Journalism - So Often Funnier than Fiction – Nicholas Brownlees: News Mockery in the English Civil War and Interregnum Press – Dean Jobb: «Written with Powers Truly Comick»: Joseph Addison, Richard Steele and the Birth of Social and Political Satire – Ben Stubbs: Travel Writing and Humor: From Dickens and Twain to the Present Day – Mary M. Cronin: Sifting Comic Wheat from Western Chaff: Alex E. Sweet, John Armoy Knox, and the Humor
of the American West – Mark J. Noonan: Howling Mad: Mad Magazine, Allen Ginsberg, and the Culture Wars of the 1950s – David Swick: Comedy in Tragedy: Humor in the Literary Journalism of James Cameron – Hendrik Michael: Words! Wisdom! Gibberish!: Verbal Irony in Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72 – Antonio Castillo: The Clinic: Satirizing and Interrogating Power in post-Pinochet Chile – Carolyn Rickett: Deadly Funny: How John Diamond Used Humor to Tackle the Taboo Subjects of Cancer and Dying – James Waller-Davies: «Common sense dancing»: Clive James’s Invention of the Television Column as a Comic Genre – Matthew Ricketson: John Clarke and the Power of Satire in Journalism – Rob Steen: A Sporting Chance: Fun and Failure - Both On and Off the Field – Dermot Heaney: Bowling Them Over and Over with Wit: Forms and Functions of Humor in Live Text Cricket Coverage – Sue Joseph: Harmer, Humor and The Hoopla: In the Vanguard of Australian Female Comedy – Asif Hameed: Speaking Truth to Power in 140 Characters or Less: Political Satire, Civic Engagement and Journalism – Blake Lambert: Twitter and the Revitalization of Black Humor in Journalism – Kevin M. Lerner: How Spy, the Iconic Satirical Magazine of the 1980s, Invented Contemporary Snark, and How Internet Journalism Has Misappropriated It – Richard Lance Keeble and David Swick: Putting Fun into the Curriculum.

The Funniest Pages

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Richard Lance Keeble

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      View other formats and editions of The Funniest Pages by

      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/30/2016 12:03:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433130991, 978-1433130991
      ISBN10: 1433130998

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      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.

      Trade Review
      «Although at times one yearns for a few more jokes to leaven the analysis, this is serious and useful survey of the uses of humour in journalism.»
      (James Hollings, Pacific Journalism Review 24/2 2018)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: David Swick/Richard Lance Keeble: Journalism - So Often Funnier than Fiction – Nicholas Brownlees: News Mockery in the English Civil War and Interregnum Press – Dean Jobb: «Written with Powers Truly Comick»: Joseph Addison, Richard Steele and the Birth of Social and Political Satire – Ben Stubbs: Travel Writing and Humor: From Dickens and Twain to the Present Day – Mary M. Cronin: Sifting Comic Wheat from Western Chaff: Alex E. Sweet, John Armoy Knox, and the Humor
      of the American West – Mark J. Noonan: Howling Mad: Mad Magazine, Allen Ginsberg, and the Culture Wars of the 1950s – David Swick: Comedy in Tragedy: Humor in the Literary Journalism of James Cameron – Hendrik Michael: Words! Wisdom! Gibberish!: Verbal Irony in Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72 – Antonio Castillo: The Clinic: Satirizing and Interrogating Power in post-Pinochet Chile – Carolyn Rickett: Deadly Funny: How John Diamond Used Humor to Tackle the Taboo Subjects of Cancer and Dying – James Waller-Davies: «Common sense dancing»: Clive James’s Invention of the Television Column as a Comic Genre – Matthew Ricketson: John Clarke and the Power of Satire in Journalism – Rob Steen: A Sporting Chance: Fun and Failure - Both On and Off the Field – Dermot Heaney: Bowling Them Over and Over with Wit: Forms and Functions of Humor in Live Text Cricket Coverage – Sue Joseph: Harmer, Humor and The Hoopla: In the Vanguard of Australian Female Comedy – Asif Hameed: Speaking Truth to Power in 140 Characters or Less: Political Satire, Civic Engagement and Journalism – Blake Lambert: Twitter and the Revitalization of Black Humor in Journalism – Kevin M. Lerner: How Spy, the Iconic Satirical Magazine of the 1980s, Invented Contemporary Snark, and How Internet Journalism Has Misappropriated It – Richard Lance Keeble and David Swick: Putting Fun into the Curriculum.

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