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Review Articles

Applying mass communication frameworks to study humor's impact: advancing the study of political satire

Pages 273-288 | Received 10 Feb 2020, Published online: 15 Jul 2020

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Read on this site (7)

Ellen Droog, Christian Burgers & David L. Mann. (2023) Cognitive, Emotional and Excitative Responses to Satirical News. Mass Communication and Society 26:6, pages 913-937.
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Stephen Skalicky, Britta C. Brugman, Ellen Droog & Christian Burgers. (2023) Satire from a far-away land: psychological distance and satirical news. Information, Communication & Society 26:8, pages 1548-1565.
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Sophie Maddocks & Fallon Parfaite. (2023) “Watch me pretend to punch my girlfriend”: exploring youth responses to viral dating violence. Feminist Media Studies 0:0, pages 1-16.
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Stephen Skalicky. (2022) Modeling Satirical Uptake Using Discourse Processing Methods. Discourse Processes 59:9, pages 702-721.
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Julia R. Fox. (2022) Funny You Mention It: A Synthesis of Published Research on Learning from Comedic Versus Serious News. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 66:4, pages 674-697.
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Chris Skurka, Rainer Romero-Canyas, Helen H. Joo & Jeff Niederdeppe. (2022) Choose Your Own Emotion: Predictors of Selective Exposure to Emotion-Inducing Climate Messages. Environmental Communication 16:3, pages 424-431.
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Articles from other publishers (7)

Christopher M. Dobmeier, John J. Brooks, Nathan Walter & R. Lance Holbert. (2023) From Punchlines to Punches: A Meta-Analysis of the Persuasive Effects of Horatian and Juvenalian Political Satires. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly.
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Caroline V Leicht. (2022) Nightly News or Nightly Jokes? News Parody as a Form of Political Communication: A Review of the Literature. Political Studies Review 21:2, pages 390-399.
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Anne Marthe Möller & Mark Boukes. (2021) Online social environments and their impact on video viewers: The effects of user comments on entertainment experiences and knowledge gain during political satire consumption. New Media & Society 25:5, pages 999-1022.
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Mark Boukes & Heather L. LaMarre. (2023) Satire without borders: the age-moderated effect of one-sided versus two-sided satire on hedonic experiences and patriotism. HUMOR 36:1, pages 1-24.
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Stephen Skalicky & Victoria Chen. 2023. Reference. Reference 213 231 .
Kerrie Foxwell-Norton & Claire Konkes. (2021) Is the Great Barrier Reef dead? Satire, death and environmental communication. Media International Australia 184:1, pages 106-121.
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Sisanda Nkoala. 2021. The Politics of Laughter in the Social Media Age. The Politics of Laughter in the Social Media Age 233 247 .

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