Use Of Humor Essays

  • Franz Kafka's Use of Humor

    1617 Words  | 4 Pages

    Franz Kafka's Use of Humor Franz Kafka, born on July 3, 1883 in Bohemia, in the city of Prague, has been recognized as one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. His works have been called "cloudy, mysterious, inexplicable" (Oates ix). Most people hear the term Kafkan or Kafkaesque and think of dark, fantastic tales with almost no basis in our known reality. But what of Kafka's sense of humor? I personally laughed out loud several times while reading Kafka's Amerika. Were these snippets

  • Effective Use of Humor in Hamlet

    935 Words  | 2 Pages

    Effective Use of Humor in Hamlet The use of humor in a tragic story helps to give the reader a break from the monotony of a depressing story line. “If a story were completely filled with depressing and tragic events, the readers' interest would most definitely be lost”( Bloom 91). William Shakespeare's, Hamlet is based on the tragedy of a murder of the king of Denmark, whose son must revenge his murderer. Therefore it is classified as a tragedy and if humor weren't present in the play it would

  • Use of Humor in Erdrich's Tracks

    1853 Words  | 4 Pages

    Use of Humor in Erdrich's Tracks An old adage claims that laughter is the best medicine to cure human ailments.  Although this treatment might sound somewhat unorthodox, its value as a remedy can be traced back to ancient times when Hypocrites, in his medical treatise, stressed the importance of  “a gay and cheerful mood on the part of the physician and patient fighting disease” (Bakhtin 67).  Aristotle viewed laughter as man’s quintessential privilege:  “Of all living creatures only man is

  • Effective Use of Humor in Magazine Advertising

    796 Words  | 2 Pages

    Effective Use of Humor in Magazine Advertising The purpose of a magazine advertisement is to attract the reader’s attention and hold it long enough for the reader to recognize and remember the name brand of the product being advertised. This is achieved, in many cases, by the use of a comedic image or phrase. These, hopefully, will cause the reader to sit up and look further into what just made him or her smile or even laugh. This technique is seen quite often in the pages of the latest issue

  • Use of Humor in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    Use of Humor in Romeo and Juliet Romeo and Juliet is one of Shakespeare's most famous plays. One, could give many reasons as to why this play became such a huge success, but one of the most important reasons could be the use of humour in the play. The main reason for doing this could be to relieve the tensions in the play, and to entertain and keep the Elizabethan audience interested. Humour plays a very significant part in the play as it allows Shakespeare to create a lot of contrasts

  • The Use of Humor

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Humor is portrayed as the main theme of the two essays by Margaret Atwood, Female Body, and Why We Crave Horror Movies by Stephen King. However, due to different subject matter being discussed, the humor employed in each is dissimilar in many ways. The essay by Atwood is written in relation to the body of a female in which she manages to give the readers a sensitivity of the female body with a comparison of a female mentality to that of a man. She crafts her essay using humorous approach such as

  • Emily Dickinson

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    dramatic and poetic lines in her writing. Although Dickinson’s poetry can often be defined as sad and moody, we can find the use of humor and irony in many of her poems. By looking at the humor and sarcasm found in three of Dickinson’s poems, "Success Is Counted Sweetest", "I am Nobody", and "Some keep the Sabbath Going to Church", one can examine each poem show how Dickinson used humor and irony for the dual purposes of comic relief and to stress an idea or conclusion about her life and the environment

  • Cosbys Ebonics

    1020 Words  | 3 Pages

    education, which increases his credibility. Cosby, being a black man, should not affect how his essay is read but it may be an issue to some. His use of humor makes the subject easier to comprehend and the entire piece more interesting. There is always a serious way and a lighter way to address any problem that affects many people and Cosby's choice to use humor makes more sense considering who he is in the public eye. Ebonics is a difficult issue to deal with, and Cosby makes a valid point that it should

  • Fried Green Tomatoes Human Nat

    1266 Words  | 3 Pages

    life places before us. Flagg explores humor, nostalgia, and avoidance as common examples of how, not only her characters, but humans in general confront the circumstances surrounding their lives. Humor is and integral part of human nature. It has the ability to lighten almost any situation and put people at ease. Humor is a common bond between any person on earth, from the very wealthy to the impoverished. Idgie Threadgoode is the perfect embodiment of humor. Her wisecracks and tall tales helped

  • Edward Abbey's Great American Desert

    1367 Words  | 3 Pages

    stirring curiosity about these fascinating ecosystems. He both invites and dissuades his readers from visiting the deserts of North America through the use of humor and sarcasm. In this essay, he is rhetorically successful in arguing that the open spaces of the undeveloped deserts are sacred places in need of respect and protection through his clever use of pathos and logos. Born in Home, Pennsylvania in 1927, Abbey worked as a forest ranger and fire look-out for the National Forest Service after

  • Therapeutic Use of Humor Description

    1100 Words  | 3 Pages

    The therapeutic use of humor can be loosely defined as any activities that use the positive emotional responses associated with humor, smiling and laughter to specifically benefit one or more clients’ social, emotional, physical, cognitive or wellness domains. Using humor, therapeutically, involves establishing specific desired outcomes for a client which are facilitated by the use of humor and related techniques. Dattilo & McKenney, (2011) define the therapeutic use of humor when “specialists and

  • How People Use Humor

    1223 Words  | 3 Pages

    How do lots of people handle humor? There are people that take humor very seriously and if you make a joke they get offended very easily. In the other hand, there are people that think humor is a constant habit and sometimes it can be taken too far. Many of us use humor to relieve boredom, to gain power and relieve tension? Humor is a wonderful way to make a person laugh. Some people try to play humor jokes when they fill that they are bored or they fill tension or sometimes even to gain power.

  • Lopez's Use Of Humor Essay

    1682 Words  | 4 Pages

    Humor has many aspects; it can leave you laughing, or as it sharpens its ironic claws it can cause catharsis. Humor as a Postmodern creative device can be seen in the paradox imagery, satirical references and dark humor of postmodern literature, architecture, and art (Fiero 503). Postmodern has continued to influence the world around us, by assisting in the letting go of pre-World War II constraints thereby leading us through modernization to globalization that engages us in contemporary paradigms(

  • Raymond Carver's Use Of Dark Humor

    1157 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dark humor is a tool prominent in many of Raymond Carver’s stories. One can see dark humor in works such as “Careful”, “A Small Good Thing”, “Whoever was using this bed”, and to some extent “Cathedral”. Nevertheless, dark humor is often used within Carver stories without it becoming the main emphasis, though some of his subject matter remains gloomy. Several stories, however, such as “A Small Good Thing”, and “Whoever was using this bed”, use dark humor as a main feature of the plot. These two stories

  • The Use of Humor in the Writings of Mark Twain

    2008 Words  | 5 Pages

    What is humor? With humor we think of something that is obvious, something that sticks out to us in a book or in a paper that makes us laugh. Samuel Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, included numerous occasions of humor throughout his writings, though Mark Twain makes his humor very dry and sometimes hard to tell that it is even there. Mark Twain, unlike most authors, includes humor in his writings without it being blatantly obvious. In a small excerpt from an essay by Naomi Hori on humor in one

  • The Use Of Humor In Holocaust Literature

    1769 Words  | 4 Pages

    Thus, many researchers and scholars from all parts of the world have studied and have written dissertations on Holocaust literature and how to approach the Holocaust through literature. For instance, in a Master thesis, done by Hanni Meirich, the use of humour in Holocaust literature was studied. Meirich (2013) suggests that humour is often used as a tool in Holocaust literature either to distance the authors from the events they are narrating and to perhaps maintain the Jews’ dignity. Furthermore

  • The Use Of Humor In Art Spiegelman's Maus

    1269 Words  | 3 Pages

    was to the Jewish people. Nevertheless, the novel finds very effective ways to insert forms of humor in the inner story and outer story of Maus. Although the Holocaust has a heart wrenching effect on the novel as a whole, the effective use of humor allows for the story to become slightly less severe and a more tolerable read. In novels with delicate topics, such as the Holocaust, small glimpse of humor help detach the reader

  • Emily Dickinson's Use of Humor and Irony

    1318 Words  | 3 Pages

    Emily Dickinson's Use of Humor and Irony While much of Emily Dickinson's poetry has been described as sad or morose, the poetess did use humor and irony in many of her poems. This essay will address the humor and/ or irony found in five of Dickinson's poems: "Faith" is a Fine Invention, I'm Nobody! Who are you?, Some keep the Sabbath Going to Church and Success Is Counted Sweetest. The attempt will be made to show how Dickinson used humor and / or irony for the dual purposes of comic relief

  • Use of Humor by Woody Allen and Sigmund Freud

    2499 Words  | 5 Pages

    The concept of humor is an incredibly complicated one, having undergone complex analyses and innumerable manners of usage from the times of the ancient Greeks through the modern era. Masters of comedy and their works have become part of the human experience, widely ranging from Shakespeare’s masterful Much Ado About Nothing to the much-loved television series I Love Lucy. Humor, although in many ways considered to be largely mass-market and tailored to the popular majority, has not escaped the realm

  • Use Of Humor In Paul Beatty's The Sellout

    986 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Paul Beatty utilizes humor in his novel “The Sellout” to force the reader stop and think about the intentions of acts regarding race. By presenting these ideas in a comical light rather than in a strictly no-nonsense tone, it is effectively making the reader realize how uncomfortable specific jokes make them feel, whilst also opening them up to further discussion about racism. The narrator and protagonist, Bon Bon’s frank and humorous voice helps lead audience members to be honest with themselves