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Mirth of Nations (Clt)
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments, 1. Introduction, 2. The Self-Mocking Scottish Sense of Humor, 3. The Balanced Jewish Sense of Humor, 4. Jokes about Jewish Women and Australian Men, 5. Canadian Jokes about Newfoundlanders: Neighborly, Bilingual, North American, 6. Jokes about Newfies and Jokes Told by Newfoundlanders, 7. American Jokes about Poles, 8. Polish Jokes and Polish Conflicts, 9. Conclusion, General Bibliography, Index

About the Author

Christie Davies is professor of sociology at the University of Reading, England. He has been a visiting lecturer in India, Poland, and the United States, and has taught in Australia. He is the author of books on criminology, the sociology of morality, censorship and humor, and his work has been published as book chapters or in journals worldwide. These works include Wrongful Imprisonment, The Strange Death of Moral Britain, and The Corporation under Siege.

Reviews

-The Mirth of Nations is a must for humor scholars. It is truly interdisciplinary: It makes use of insights of linguistics in order to answer questions posed within sociology and humor studies. It is truly scholarly, unbiased and non-ideological.- -... a pleasure to read, the style is lucid, and the voice of the author is unmistakable and strong; the repetition of related points in many parts of the book only serves to strengthen overall argument. What is striking is the joy with which Davies refutes apparently false claims, expressing his surprise at the fact that their proponents did not bother to look for arguments to support their theses. The true value of the study thus consists in the power of its argument, which is derived from the thorough archive research and the intellectual honesty of the author, who allows the picture of ethnic joking to be complex and does not cover up difficult issues.- --Humor -Davies... is a renaissance man who moves effortlessly across disciplinary boundaries and has made particularly original contributions in the area of religion, the military, social control, crime, and penology. He is... a sceptic about the taken-for-granted and someone with a mordant tongue and pen for identifying the spurious and unexamined behind the facade of 'the obvious'.- --Journal of Contemporary Religion -The importance of The Mirth of Nations is that it takes jokes back from the theorists and returns them to the comedians. And that's all of us.- --The New Criterion -Christie Davies [is] the leading authority on comparative ethnic humor...- --American Journal of Sociology -The demon that drives Davis to such extraordinary lengths is a determination to slay all those apostles of political correctness who regard jokes about religious and ethnic minorities as a likely cause of prejudice, hojstility and even aggression towards such groups. There is, he argues, a dangerous circularity about this conventional liveral view. Davies reckons that we can get off this roundabout, only by looking carefully at the relationship between two sets of -social facts- the patterns of actual jokes and the social and cultural setting within which they occur. Consider American jokes about Poles.- --The Times Higher Education Supplement

"The Mirth of Nations is a must for humor scholars. It is truly interdisciplinary: It makes use of insights of linguistics in order to answer questions posed within sociology and humor studies. It is truly scholarly, unbiased and non-ideological." ..". a pleasure to read, the style is lucid, and the voice of the author is unmistakable and strong; the repetition of related points in many parts of the book only serves to strengthen overall argument. What is striking is the joy with which Davies refutes apparently false claims, expressing his surprise at the fact that their proponents did not bother to look for arguments to support their theses. The true value of the study thus consists in the power of its argument, which is derived from the thorough archive research and the intellectual honesty of the author, who allows the picture of ethnic joking to be complex and does not cover up difficult issues." --Humor "Davies... is a renaissance man who moves effortlessly across disciplinary boundaries and has made particularly original contributions in the area of religion, the military, social control, crime, and penology. He is... a sceptic about the taken-for-granted and someone with a mordant tongue and pen for identifying the spurious and unexamined behind the facade of 'the obvious'." --Journal of Contemporary Religion "The importance of The Mirth of Nations is that it takes jokes back from the theorists and returns them to the comedians. And that's all of us." --The New Criterion "Christie Davies [is] the leading authority on comparative ethnic humor..." --American Journal of Sociology "The demon that drives Davis to such extraordinary lengths is a determination to slay all those apostles of political correctness who regard jokes about religious and ethnic minorities as a likely cause of prejudice, hojstility and even aggression towards such groups. There is, he argues, a dangerous circularity about this conventional liveral view. Davies reckons that we can get off this roundabout, only by looking carefully at the relationship between two sets of "social facts" the patterns of actual jokes and the social and cultural setting within which they occur. Consider American jokes about Poles." --The Times Higher Education Supplement

""The Mirth of Nations" is a must for humor scholars. It is truly interdisciplinary: It makes use of insights of linguistics in order to answer questions posed within sociology and humor studies. It is truly scholarly, unbiased and non-ideological." ..". a pleasure to read, the style is lucid, and the voice of the author is unmistakable and strong; the repetition of related points in many parts of the book only serves to strengthen overall argument. What is striking is the joy with which Davies refutes apparently false claims, expressing his surprise at the fact that their proponents did not bother to look for arguments to support their theses. The true value of the study thus consists in the power of its argument, which is derived from the thorough archive research and the intellectual honesty of the author, who allows the picture of ethnic joking to be complex and does not cover up difficult issues." --"Humor" "Davies... is a renaissance man who moves effortlessly across disciplinary boundaries and has made particularly original contributions in the area of religion, the military, social control, crime, and penology. He is... a sceptic about the taken-for-granted and someone with a mordant tongue and pen for identifying the spurious and unexamined behind the facade of 'the obvious'." --"Journal of Contemporary Religion" "The importance of "The Mirth of Nations" is that it takes jokes back from the theorists and returns them to the comedians. And that's all of us." --"The New Criterion" "Christie Davies [is] the leading authority on comparative ethnic humor..." --"American Journal of Sociology" "The demon that drives Davis to such extraordinary lengths is a determination to slay all those apostles of political correctness who regard jokes about religious and ethnic minorities as a likely cause of prejudice, hojstility and even aggression towards such groups. There is, he argues, a dangerous circularity about this conventional liveral view. Davies reckons that we can get off this roundabout, only by looking carefully at the relationship between two sets of "social facts" the patterns of actual jokes and the social and cultural setting within which they occur. Consider American jokes about Poles." --"The Times Higher Education Supplement"

""The Mirth of Nations" is a must for humor scholars. It is truly interdisciplinary: It makes use of insights of linguistics in order to answer questions posed within sociology and humor studies. It is truly scholarly, unbiased and non-ideological."..". a pleasure to read, the style is lucid, and the voice of the author is unmistakable and strong; the repetition of related points in many parts of the book only serves to strengthen overall argument. What is striking is the joy with which Davies refutes apparently false claims, expressing his surprise at the fact that their proponents did not bother to look for arguments to support their theses. The true value of the study thus consists in the power of its argument, which is derived from the thorough archive research and the intellectual honesty of the author, who allows the picture of ethnic joking to be complex and does not cover up difficult issues."--"Humor""Davies... is a renaissance man who moves effortlessly across disciplinary boundaries and has made particularly original contributions in the area of religion, the military, social control, crime, and penology. He is... a sceptic about the taken-for-granted and someone with a mordant tongue and pen for identifying the spurious and unexamined behind the facade of 'the obvious'." --"Journal of Contemporary Religion""The importance of "The Mirth of Nations" is that it takes jokes back from the theorists and returns them to the comedians. And that's all of us." --"The New Criterion""Christie Davies [is] the leading authority on comparative ethnic humor..." --"American Journal of Sociology""The demon that drives Davis to such extraordinary lengths is a determination to slay all those apostles of political correctness who regard jokes about religious and ethnic minorities as a likely cause of prejudice, hojstility and even aggression towards such groups. There is, he argues, a dangerous circularity about this conventional liveral view. Davies rec

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