In this Issue
Studies in American Humor publishes articles on topics, themes, practices, practitioners, and media across the wide spectrum of American humor, past and present, for an audience made up primarily of scholars and students in the humanities, especially literary and cultural studies. The journal values new transnational and interdisciplinary approaches as well as traditional critical and historical humanities scholarship. StAH is the official journal of the American Humor Studies Association.
published by
Penn State University Pressviewing issue
Volume 7, Number 2, 2021Table of Contents
Special Issue
American Humor and Matters of Empire

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View Gendered Comic Traditions: How Fanny Fern's Satire Subverts Nineteenth-Century Colonial Continuity and Enables Twenty-First Century Neocolonial Hybridity
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Download Gendered Comic Traditions: How Fanny Fern's Satire Subverts Nineteenth-Century Colonial Continuity and Enables Twenty-First Century Neocolonial Hybridity
Book Reviews

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View Crazy Funny: Popular Black Satire and The Methods of Madness by Lisa A. Guerrero, and: Laughing to Keep from Dying: African American Satire in the Twenty-First Century by Danielle Fuentes Morgan (review)
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Download Crazy Funny: Popular Black Satire and The Methods of Madness by Lisa A. Guerrero, and: Laughing to Keep from Dying: African American Satire in the Twenty-First Century by Danielle Fuentes Morgan (review)
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ISSN | 2333-9934 |
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Print ISSN | 0095-280X |
Launched on MUSE | 2021-10-19 |
Open Access | No |