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- Studies in American Humor
- Penn State University Press
- Review
- Rhetoric, Humor, and the Public Sphere: From Socrates to Stephen Colbert by Elizabeth Benacka (review) Volume 4, Number 2, 2018, pp. 299-302
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $36.00 USD.
This issue contains 24 articles in total
- A Charlie Brown Religion: Exploring the Life and Spiritual Work of Charles M. Schulz by Stephen Lind (review)
- Comedy Begins with Our Simplest Gestures: Levinas, Ethics, and Humor ed. by Brian Bergen-Aurand (review)
- Sweet and Lowdown: Woody Allen's Cinema of Regret by Lloyd Michaels (review)
- She Could Be Chaplin! The Comedic Brilliance of Alice Howell by Anthony Slide (review)
- Slow Ball Cartoonist: The Extraordinary Life of Indiana Native and Pulitzer Prize Winner John T. McCutcheon of the "Chicago Tribune." by Tony Garel-Frantzen (review)
- The Tar Baby: A Global History by Bryan Wagner (review)
- Nothing On a Stage Is Permanent: The Harry Langdon Scrapbook by Harry Langdon, Jr., and: Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy ed. by Gabriella Oldham and Mabel Langdon (review)
- Standing Up, Speaking Out: Stand-up Comedy and the Rhetoric of Social Change ed. by Matthew R. Meier and Casey R. Schmitt (review)
- No Laughing Matter: Visual Humor in Ideas of Race, Nationality, and Ethnicity ed. by Angela Rosenthal, David Bindman, and Adrian W. B. Randolph (review)
- Rhetoric, Humor, and the Public Sphere: From Socrates to Stephen Colbert by Elizabeth Benacka (review)
- A Philosophy of Comedy on Stage and Screen: You Have to Be There by Shaun May (review)
- Lalo Alcaraz: Political Cartooning in the Latino Community by Héctor D. Fernández L'Hoeste (review)
- Lacan, Psychoanalysis, and Comedy ed. by Patricia Gherovici and Manya Steinkoler (review)
- Four of the Three Musketeers: The Marx Brothers on Stage by Robert S. Bader (review)
- The Year's Work in American Humor Studies, 2016
- Comic Outbreaks and Scholastic Discontents
- The Pernicious Use of "Humorist" to Describe Mark Twain (and Other Comic Writers)
- Is Satire Compatible with Free Speech?
- Mark Twain's "Assault of Laughter" and the Limits of Political Humor
- "Scribbling to excite the laughter of God's creatures": Some Thoughts on "Mere" Humor, Entertainment, and Pleasure
- When the Candle Goes Out: The Complexity of Simple Jokes and the Limits of Satire
- WTF Is Laughter to Mark Twain?
- Comic Assaults and Somersaults: An Introduction
- Announcing "On Second Thought": A New Feature
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