The Strategies Behind Humor Formation

dc.contributor.advisorFurkó, Péter
dc.contributor.authorNagy, Anna
dc.contributor.departmentDE--TEK--Bölcsészettudományi Karhu_HU
dc.date.accessioned2013-01-22T09:00:28Z
dc.date.available2013-01-22T09:00:28Z
dc.date.created2012-03-28
dc.date.issued2013-01-22T09:00:28Z
dc.description.abstractA few decades back, research in pragmatics overly relied on H.P. Grice's cooperative principle and conversational maxims: quality, quantity, relation and manner. His theory emerged in 1975, as part of his work entitled Logic and conversation, and was righfully appealing and thought to be reasonable in almost every sense of the word. However, the theory itself ailed to account for a very ordinary phenomenon of human interactions, which began to attract a lot of attention from the linguistic community relatively recently. This issue is humour and is known to be quite a puzzling aspect of pragmatic research, ultimately a problem that the cooperative principle was not ready to face. in Grice's vew humor can only be seen as a deviations from maxims, thus does not supply an adequate explanation for how humor is produced consciously, the major concern of this paper.hu_HU
dc.description.courseanglisztikahu_HU
dc.description.degreeMschu_HU
dc.format.extent35hu_HU
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2437/156526
dc.language.isoenhu_HU
dc.rights.accessiphu_HU
dc.subjecthumorhu_HU
dc.subjectrelevancia-teóriahu_HU
dc.subject.dspaceDEENK Témalista::Nyelvtudomány::Nyelvészethu_HU
dc.titleThe Strategies Behind Humor Formationhu_HU
dc.title.subtitleA Discourse-Pragmatic Aspecthu_HU
dc.typediplomamunka
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