Children’s development of humour in everyday interactions: Two case-studies in French and Brazilian Portuguese

In order to understand how children learn to recognize and use humor in their own cultural environment, we have chosen to study their production in two different languages and cultures. We studied a French-speaking monolingual child and a Brazilian Portuguese-speaking child, video-recorded once a mo...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of humour research 2020-12, Vol.8 (4), p.112-131, Article 112-131
Hauptverfasser: Del Re, Alessandra, Dodane, Christelle, Morgenstern, Aliyah, Vieira, Alessandra
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container_end_page 131
container_issue 4
container_start_page 112
container_title European journal of humour research
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creator Del Re, Alessandra
Dodane, Christelle
Morgenstern, Aliyah
Vieira, Alessandra
description In order to understand how children learn to recognize and use humor in their own cultural environment, we have chosen to study their production in two different languages and cultures. We studied a French-speaking monolingual child and a Brazilian Portuguese-speaking child, video-recorded once a month up to seven years old. The detailed multimodal linguistic coding of our data enabled us to draw the multimodal paths the two children followed from the first instances of shared amusement initiated by the adult, expressed mainly through reactive behavior such as laughing, to the children’s own verbal production of successful humor in dialogue. Our study demonstrates that the production of children’s humor is closely linked to the family input (their micro-culture), and to children’s multimodal linguistic and meta-cognitive development. We did not observe important differences between the two children at the macro-cultural level, but there were noticeable inter-individual differences.
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subjects Anthropology
brazilian
children
Communication studies
Comparative Linguistics
development
french
Humanities and Social Sciences
humour
Linguistics
microculture
Pragmatics
Social development
Sociology of Culture
title Children’s development of humour in everyday interactions: Two case-studies in French and Brazilian Portuguese
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