Buradasınız

The Role of Humor in the Construction of Satire in Nigerian Political Cartoons

Journal Name:

Publication Year:

Abstract (2. Language): 
The communicative functions of humor and its visual power have made political cartoons an interesting research field across academic disciplines. The first decade of the Millennium has witnessed a considerable research on editorial cartoons. This increasing research demonstrates that editorial cartoons have successfully constituted a genuine genre within media discourse. Cartoons are used to express opinions, construct valuable arguments and provide specific knowledge on contemporary social issues. The goal of the genre is to provide political commentary, address crucial issues and criticize political leaders and their contemptible practices in an artful fashion. In a nutshell, the genre serves as a medium of political reporting articulating a particular message from a particular point of view using language as its prime tool. Given their contents mostly expressed through visual illustrations, political cartoons are best understood through investigation of incorporated visual rhetoric. This paper aims at unfolding the nature and function of humor in Nigerian political cartoons using theoretical perspectives of humor as method of analysis. To this end, content analysis was used to sort out contents of the cartoons. 35 cartoons texts were extracted from the two most prominent Nigerian newspapers namely: Vanguard and Daily Trust. The findings indicated that cartoonists use humor in Nigerian political cartoons to relive audiences of stressful situations and persuade them towards making opinion on contemporary issues in society. More specifically, Nigerian cartoonists manipulate aggressive and affliative humor styles purposely to construct criticisms pointed to political leaders and comment on current socio-political issues of the moment in order to initiate social and political reforms.
148-165

REFERENCES

References: 

Apte, M. L. (1985). Humor and laughter: An anthropological approach. Cornell university press.
Attardo, S. (1993). Violation of conversational maxims and cooperation: the case of jokes. Journal of Pragmatics, 19(6), 537–558.
Becker, & Stephen. (1959). Comic Art in America. Simon & Schuster.
Bell, N. D. (2002). Using and understanding humor in a second language: A case study.
Benoit, W. L., Klyukovski, A., McHale, J., & Airne, D. (2001). A fantasy theme analysis of political cartoons on the Clinton-Lewinsky-Starr affair. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 18(4), 377–394.
Bergen, B. (2004). To awaken a sleeping giant. Cognition and culture in September 11 political cartoons. Language, Culture and Mind. Standford, CA: CSLI, 23–35.
Bormann, E. G., Koester, J., & Bennett, J. (1978). Political cartoons and salient rhetorical fantasies: An empirical analysis of the’76 presidential campaign. Communication Monographs, 45(4), 317–329.
Cahn, D. (1984). The political cartoon as communication. Media Development, 4, 39–42.
Conners, J. L. (2007). Popular culture in political cartoons: Analyzing cartoonist approaches. PS: Political Science & Politics, 40(02), 261–265.
Delporte, c. (1995). Images of French-French war: caricature at a time of Dreyfus affair. French cultural studies, ,, 6(2), 221-248.
Edwards, J. L. (1997). Political cartoons in the 1988 presidential campaign: Image, metaphor, and narrative. Routledge.
Edwards, J. L., & Ware, L. (2005). Representing the Public in Campaign Media. American Behavioral Scientist, 49(3), 466.
Eko, L. (2007). It’s a Political Jungle Out There. International Communication Gazette, 69(3), 219.
El Refaie, E. (2009). Multiliteracies: how readers interpret political cartoons. Visual Communication, 8(2), 181.
El Refaie, E., & H\örschelmann, K. (2010). Young people’s readings of a political cartoon and the concept of multimodal literacy. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 31(2), 195–207.
Feldman, O. (1995). Political reality and editorial cartoons in Japan: how the national dailies illustrate the japanese Prime Minister. JOURNALISM QUARTERLY, 72, 571–571.
Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies
Volume: 2 – Issue: 3 – July - 2012
© Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies 164
Han, J. S. . (2006). Empire of Comic Visions: Japanese Cartoon Journalism and its Pictorial Statements on Korea, 1876–1910. Japanese Studies, 26(3), 283–302.
Handl, H. (1990). Streotypication in mass media: The case of political caricature in Australian daily newspapers. Angewandte-sozialforschung, 16(1-2), 101-107.
James, D. L. (2001). split a gut and learn: Theory and research. Oakaland: Farmington Hills, MI: Oakaland Community College (ERIC Document.
Janes, L. M., & Olson, J. M. (2000). Jeer pressure: The behavioral effects of observing ridicule of others. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 26(4), 474.
Kulkarni, K. (2004). Billionaires for Bush: Parody as Political Intervention. emisférica, Journal of the Hemispheric Institute for Performance and Politics, 1.
Lefcourt. (2001). Humor: The psychology of living buoyantly. Kluwer/Plenum: NY.
Lewis, P. (1989). The Human Enterprise - Google Scholar. (n.d.). Retrieved October 15, 2011, from http://scholar.google.com.my/scholar?q=Lewis%2C++P.+%281989%29.+The+Huma...
Lynch, O. H. (2002). Humorous communication: Finding a place for humor in communication research. Communication Theory, 12(4), 423–445.
MacHovec, F. J. (1988). Humor: Theory, history, applications. CC Thomas.
Martin, R. A., Puhlik-Doris, P., Larsen, G., Gray, J., & Weir, K. (2003). Individual differences in uses of humor and their relation to psychological well-being: Development of the Humor Styles Questionnaire. Journal of Research in Personality, 37(1), 48–75.
Mazid, B. E. . (2008). Cowboy and misanthrope: a critical (discourse) analysis of Bush and bin Laden cartoons. Discourse & Communication, 2(4), 433.
Medhurst, M. J., & DeSousa, M. A. (1981). Political cartoons as rhetorical forms: A taxonomy of graphic discourse. Communication Monographs.
Meyer, J. C. (2000). Humor as a Double-Edged Sword: Four Functions of Humor in Communication. Communication Theory, 10(3), 310–331.
Morris, R. (1993). Visual rhetoric in political cartoons: A structuralist approach. Metaphor and Symbol, 8(3), 195–210.
Morrison, M. C. (1969). The role of the political cartoonist in image making. Communication Studies, 20(4), 252–260.
Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies
Volume: 2 – Issue: 3 – July - 2012
© Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies 165
Najjar, O. A. (2007). Cartoons as a Site for the Construction of Palestinian Refugee Identity. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 31(3), 255.
Peñamarin, C. (1998). Polemic images: Metaphor and index in the language of political cartoons. Quaderni di studi semiotici.
Refaie, E. E. (2003). Understanding visual metaphor: The example of newspaper cartoons. Visual Communication, 2(1), 75.
Robinson, J. (1981). The 1970s, best political cartoons of the decade. McGraw-Hill Companies.
Ruch, W. (1996). Measurement approaches to the sense of humor: Introduction and overview. Humor-International Journal of Humor Research, 9(3-4), 239–250.
Samson, A. C., & Huber, O. (2007). The interaction of cartoonist’s gender and formal features of cartoons. Humor-International Journal of Humor Research, 20(1), 1–25.
Schmitz, J. R. (2002). Humor as a pedagogical tool in foreign language and translation courses. Humor-International Journal of Humor Research, 15(1), 89–113.
Seymour-Ure, C. (2001). What Future for the British Political Cartoon? Journalism Studies, 2(3), 333–355.
Thibodeau, R. (1989). From Racism to Tokenism. Public Opinion Quarterly, 53(4), 482.
Townsend, K. J., McDonald, P., & Esders, L. (2008). How Political, satirical cartoons illustrate Australia’s WorkChoices debate. Australian Review of Public Affairs, 9(1), 1–26.
Udoaka, N. (2003). Uyo Residents’perception of Political Cartoons In Nigerian Newspapers. Nsukka journal of history, 270.
Zillmann, D., & Bryant, J. (1980). Misattribution theory of tendentious humor* 1. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 16(2), 146–160.

Thank you for copying data from http://www.arastirmax.com