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- Digital Price: $36.00 USD (All sales final)
- Studies in American Humor
- Penn State University Press
- issue
- Series 4, Volume 1, Number 2, 2015
- Contributors
- Humor Across Media in the 1920s and 1930s: An Introduction
- The Art of Controversy: Political Cartoons and their Enduring Power by Victor S. Navasky (review)
- American Fun: Four Centuries of Joyous Revolt by John Beckman, and: The Trickster Figure in American Literature by Winifred Morgan (review)
- No Billionaire Left Behind: Satirical Activism in America by Angelique Hagerud, and: Pranksters: Making Mischief in the Modern World by Kembrew McLeod (review)
- The Politics of Irony in American Modernism by Matthew Stratton (review)
- Silent Film Comedy and American Culture by Alan Bilton (review)
- Comedy by Andrew Stott (review)
- HA! The Science of When We Laugh and Why by Scott Weems (review)
- The Humor Code: A Global Search for What Makes Things Funny by Peter McGraw and Joel Warner (review)
- A Vulgar Art: A New Approach to Stand-up Comedy by Ian Brodie (review)
- “Yoo-Hoo, Prosperity!”: Eddie Cantor and the Great Depression, 1929–36
- Waltzing with Thurber: Gender and Humor in Doris Humphrey and Vivian Fine’s The Race of Life
- The U.S. Hispanic Flapper: Pelonas and Flapperismo in U.S. Spanish-Language Newspapers, 1920–1929
- Becoming Benny: The Evolution of Jack Benny’s Character Comedy from Vaudeville to Radio
- As the Crow Flies: The Intermediality of Moran and Mack
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