Introduction
A Critique of Positive Humour
PART ONE: HISTORICAL ASPECTS
Superiority Theories
Hobbes and other Misogelasts
Incongruity Theories and Gentlemanly Laughter
Victorian Relief Theory
Bergson and the Function of Humour
Freud and the Hidden Secrets of Jokes
PART TWO: THEORETICAL ASPECTS
Laughter and Unlaughter
Embarrassment, Humour and the Social Order
Final Remarks
Professor Michael Billig is professor of social sciences at the
University of Loughborough. His most recent books are Ideology and
Opinions: Studies in Rhetorical Sociology (SAGE, 1991) and Talking
of the Royal Family (1992).
Michael Billig has been Professor of Social Sciences at
Loughborough University, UK, since 1985. He took his undergraduate
degree at Bristol University, where he also completed his Ph.D. in
experimental social psychology, under the supervision of Henri
Tajfel. Michael considers Tajfel to have have been one of the most
important figures in the history of social psychology. After
leaving Bristol to take up a lectureship at Birmingham University,
Michael turned away from experimental social psychology, which he
found to be too intellectually and methodologically
restricting.
In his work, Michael has attempted to approach social psychological
issues from a broader base within the social sciences. He has
written books on a variety of topics. His books for SAGE include
Banal Nationalism, in which he argued that in established
nation-states there is an everyday, often unnoticed form of
nationalism. Ideological Dilemmas, written in collaboration with
other members of the Loughborough Discourse and Rhetoric Group,
suggested that we should study ideology by examining how people
argue and use language in everyday life. SAGE also published his
book The Hidden Roots of Critical Psychology, which argues that the
neglected figure of the third earl of Shaftesbury should be seen as
a pivotal influence in the history of psychology, especially in the
history of critical psychology. Michael has also written books on
rhetoric, fascism, Freud′s theory of repression, attitudes towards
the British Royal Family and the history of rock′n′roll. His
current work argues forcefully that academic social scientists use
too much technical terminology and that ordinary concepts are often
much clearer than technical ones.
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