- Christie Davies
-
Christie Davies is a British sociologist, professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Reading, England, the author of many articles and books on criminology, the sociology of morality, censorship, and humor. He has also been visiting professor in India, Poland, United States, and Australia.[1][2]
Humor research
In his 2002 book, The Mirth of the Nations, he criticizes the theories which derive humor from conflict and superiority, and argues instead that they are a form of play - a play with aggression, superiority, and taboo-breaking. He also argues against the Freudian theory about Jewish jokes being mostly self-deprecating, claiming that instead they are based on the cultural tradition of analytical thinking and self-awareness. American folklorist Alan Dundes called the book "the provocative critique of previous scholarship on the subject".[1]
Davies is past president of the International Society for Humor Studies.[3]
Books
- 1973: Wrongful Imprisonment
- 1973: The Reactionary Joke Book, ISBN 0723404941
- 1975: Permissive Britain: Social change in the Sixties and Seventies
- 1978: Censorship and Obscenity
- 1990, 1996: Ethnic Humor Around the World: a Comparative Analysis, ISBN 025321081X
- 1998: Jokes and their Relation to Society
- 1998: The Corporation under Siege
- 2002: The Mirth of Nations, ISBN 0765800969 ; a social and historical study of jokes told in the English-speaking countries, based on archives and other primary sources, including old and rare joke books.
- 2003: (with Goh Abe) Esuniku Joku, Kodansha ; the title is a gairaigo for "Ethnic joke"
- 2005: Jokes and groups. Monograph Series, 44. Institute for Cultural Research, London, ISBN 0904674398
- 2005, Dewi the Dragon, a collection of humorous fantasy stories
- 2006: The Strange Death of Moral Britain
- 2011: Jokes and Targets, Indiana University Press, ISBN 0253223024
References
- ^ a b The Mirth of Nations book cover
- ^ Professor Davies; staff webpage
- ^ International Society for Humor Studies webpage
Categories:- Humor researchers
- British sociologists
- Academics of the University of Reading
- Living people
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