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Self-Effacing Wit as a Response to Oppression: Dynamics in Ethnic Humor

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Self-Effacing Wit as a Response to Oppression: Dynamics in Ethnic Humor
Author(s)Juni, Samuel; Katz, Bernard
AbstractTheories of self-effacing ethnic humor are analyzed from the perspectives of psychological defense and acculturation. These processes are contrasted with masochism as explanations of self-directed wit. Developmental paradigms are appealed to in conceptualizing the sociocultural function of humor. Identification with the aggressor is conceptualized as a transitional mechanism to assimilate the minority into he host culture. Turning against the self is developed as an alternate mechanism that uses humor as a means of self-empowerment. The method of luring the aggressor into a situation that is then used against him is construed as the kamikaze maneuver and conceptualized as an ambush technique in which the role of self-effacement facilitates aggression. The analytic elements of these approaches are explored with reference to Jewish humor as a stereotype of the wit of a transient and oppressed people, and annotated examples are offered from published anthologies.
IssueNo2
Pages119
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of General Psychology
VolumeNo128
PubDateApril 2001
ISBN_ISSN0022-1309

Social Cognition

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