A Pragmatic Analysis of Implicatures in Covid-19 Coronavirus English Jokes

A Neo-Gricean Approach

Authors

  • Sahira Mousa Salman Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research/ Women Empowerment Department
  • Abdali H. AlSaidi Baghdad University - College of Arts - English Department
  • Sabariah Hj Md Rashid UCSI University/ Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i140.3604

Keywords:

implicature, humor, jokes, neo-Gricean

Abstract

The present study aims at examining implicature in covid-19 Coronavirus jokes in the light of a neo-Gricean approach. For carrying out a meaningful analysis of jokes, an eclectic model is adopted. The data of the study consist of (25) electronic coronavirus English jokes. Only (10) are selected for data analysis. The analysis deals with jokes in terms of their types, principles breaking, and humor devices utilized to infer the meaning of the intended implicature. The jokes are analyzed according to Horn’s (1989/2004) neo-Gricean principles and Attardo’s (1997) Neo-Gricean distinction between two levels of cooperation: the illocutionary Cooperative Principle (ICP) and the Perlocutionary Cooperative Principle (PCP). A neo-Gricean type of principles breaking is conducted by adopting Thomas (1995). While humour devices are analyzed according to Dynel (2009). The data of the study were collected from WhatsApp, Facebook and some other network sources.

Data analysis revealed that the (Quantity) Principle is more frequently broken than the (Relevance) Principle. The analysis showed that the ‘violation' of principles was more utilized type of breaking. In addition, ‘flouting’ and ‘opting out’ were also utilized in coronavirus jokes. As for humour devices, ‘sarcasm’, ‘irony’, ‘teasing’, and ‘self-denigrating’ were mostly used in Coronavirus jokes. This indicated that the major concern of the joke teller is criticism through humour.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Alexander, R J (1997) Aspects of Verbal Humor in English. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag.

Al kayed, M. (2019) An Analysis of Jordanian Jokes: A Pragmatic Study of Humour. Global Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. Vol.7, No. 2, pp.13-20.

Attardo, S (1993) Violation of conversational maxims and cooperation: The case of jokes. Journal of Pragmatics (19): 537-558.

Attardo, S (1997) Locutionary and perlocutionary cooperation: The perlocutionary cooperative principle. Journal of Pragmatics, (27): 753-779.

Attardo, S (2000) Irony as relevant inappropriateness. Journal of Pragmatics, 32 (6): 793–826.

Attardo, S (2017) Humor and pragmatics. In: Attardo, S. (ed.) The Routledge Handbook of Language and Humor. N.Y: Routledge, pp. 174-188.

Berger, AA (1993) Anatomy of Humor. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publisher.

Burgers, C, Van Mulken, M, and Schellens, PJ (2011) Finding irony: An introduction of the verbal irony procedure (VIP). Metaphor and Symbol, 26(3): 186–205.

Burgers, C and Van Mulken, M (2017) Humor Markers. In: Attardo, S. (ed.) The Routledge Handbook of Language and Humor, N.Y: Routledge, pp.385-399.

Cummings, L (2010) The Pragmatics Encyclopedia. N.Y.: Routledge

Dolitsky, M (1983) Humor and the unsaid. Journal of Pragmatics, (7): 39–48.

Dornerus, E (2005) Breaking maxims in conversation: A comparative study of how scriptwriters break maxims in Desperate Housewives and That 70’s Show. M.A. Thesis, Karlstad University, Sweden.

Dynel, M (2009) Beyond a Joke: Types of Conversational Humour. Language and Linguistics Compass 3/5:1284–1299, 10.1111/j.1749-818x.2009. 00152.x

Dynel, M (2011) The Pragmatics of Humor Across Discourse Domains. John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Dynel, Marta. 2013. Irony from a neo-Gricean perspective: On untruthfulness and evaluative implicature. Intercultural Pragmatics 10. 403–431.

Grice, Paul (1975) Logic and conversation. In: Cole, P. and Morgan, J. (eds.) Syntax and semantics. 3: Speech acts. New York: Academic Press, pp. 41–58.

Grice, P (1989) Studies in the way of words. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Grundy, P (1995) Doing Pragmatics. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Haiman, J (1998) Talk Is Cheap: Sarcasm, Alienation, and the Evolution of Language. New York: Oxford University Press.

Horn, L (1989) A Natural History of Negation, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press; reissued 2001, Stanford, CA: CSLI.

Horn, L (2004) Implicature. In: L.R. Horn and G. Ward (eds.) The Handbook of Pragmatics, Malden, MA: Blackwell, pp. 3–28.

Koestler, A (1964) The act of creation. London: Hutchinson.

Kuipers, G (2008) The sociology of humor. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.

Larrazabal, J M, and Korta, K (2002) Pragmatics and rhetoric for discourse analysis: Some conceptual remarks. Manuscrito: Unicamp.

Levinson, SC (1983) Pragmatics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

Martin, RA (2007) The psychology of humor: An integrative approach. Burlington, MA: Elsevier Academic Press.

Mooney, A (2004) Co-operation, violation and making sense. Journal of Pragmatics, (33):1601-1623.

Nemesi, AL (2015) Levels and types of breaking the maxims: A neo-Gricean account of humor. Intercultural Pragmatics, 12(2): 249–276.

Piskorska, Agnieszka (2019) Neo-Gricean perspective on irony, deception, and humor vs. some insights from experimental studies. Intercultural Pragmatics; 16(5): 591–610.

Procter, P (1978) Longman dictionary of contemporary English. Harlow [England: Longman.

Rochmawati, D (2017) Pragmatic and rhetorical strategies in the English-written jokes. Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics, (7): 149-159.

Schmitz, J. R. (2002). Humor as a pedagogical tool in foreign language and translation courses. Humor, 15(1), 89-114.

Sherzer, J (1985) Puns and jokes. In: Teun A. Van Dijk (ed.) Handbook of discourse analysis: discourse and dialogue, London: Academic Press: pp. 213–21.

Sperber, D and Wilson, D (1995) Relevance: Communication and Cognition. Oxford: Blackwell.

Taghiyev, I. (2017) Violation of Grice’s Maxims and Ambiguity in English Linguistic Jokes. International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, Vol. III, Issue 7, pp. 284-288)

Thomas, J (1995) Meaning in Interaction: An Introduction to Pragmatics. London and New York: Pearson Educational Limited.

Downloads

Published

2022-03-15

Issue

Section

English linguistics and literature

How to Cite

Salman, S. M., AlSaidi, A. H., & Rashid, S. H. M. (2022). A Pragmatic Analysis of Implicatures in Covid-19 Coronavirus English Jokes: A Neo-Gricean Approach. Al-Adab Journal, 1(140), 1-20. https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i140.3604

Publication Dates

Similar Articles

1-10 of 13

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.