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Original Articles

Is wit to humor what rhetoric is to poetic?

Pages 17-22 | Published online: 22 May 2009

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Read on this site (6)

Larry Powell. (1978) Topic salience and responses to the source of satirical messages. Southern Speech Communication Journal 44:1, pages 60-72.
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Larry Powell. (1977) Satirical persuasion and topic salience. Southern Speech Communication Journal 42:2, pages 151-162.
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James Larry Powell. (1975) The effects of ego involvement on responses to editorial satire. Central States Speech Journal 26:1, pages 34-38.
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GaryF. Pokorny & CharlesR. Gruner. (1969) An experimental study of the effect of satire used as support in a persuasive speech. Western Speech 33:3, pages 204-211.
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FrankE. X. Dance. (1966) Research reports. Central States Speech Journal 17:3, pages 177-180.
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CharlesR. Gruner. (1966) A further experimental study of satire as persuasion. Speech Monographs 33:2, pages 184-185.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

Ruichen Zhang. (2020) Re-directing socialist persuasion through affective reiteration: a discourse analysis of ‘Socialist Memes’ on the Chinese internet. AI & SOCIETY.
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Dick M. CarpenterIIII, Marjory J. Webster & Chad K. Bowman. (2019) White House Wit: How Presidents Use Humor as a Leadership Tool. Presidential Studies Quarterly 49:1, pages 23-55.
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Owen H. Lynch. (2002) Humorous Communication: Finding a Place for Humor in Communication Research. Communication Theory 12:4, pages 423-445.
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John C. Meyer. (2000) Humor as a Double-Edged Sword: Four Functions of Humor in Communication. Communication Theory 10:3, pages 310-331.
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Jeffrey H. Goldstein & Paul E. McGhee. 1972. The Psychology of Humor. The Psychology of Humor 263 283 .

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