A pragmatic study of irony in some British and Iraqi TV comic shows

Other Title(s)

دراسة تداولية للمفارقة في بعض البرامج التلفزيونية البريطانية و العراقية الترفيهية

Joint Authors

Ali, Abid Hammud
Hamdi, Hanna Qaysar

Source

Journal of Language Studies

Issue

Vol. 1, Issue 4 (30 Sep. 2018), pp.28-52, 25 p.

Publisher

Tikrit University College of Education for Women

Publication Date

2018-09-30

Country of Publication

Iraq

No. of Pages

25

Main Subjects

Media and Communication

Abstract EN

Lots of comic shows have been largely displayed on various TV channels and social media.

The presenters of such shows talk about different issues such as political, social, economic etc.

This study aims at identifying the most common pragmatic strategies used to issue irony in the two comic shows which are Last week tonight and Al-Basheerare chosen.

.

Also, it aims at showing the differences between British and Iraqi comic shows in these aspects.

To test out the validity of these hypothesis, eight comic videos are selected-four from each show.

It is hypothesized that: (i) the presenter of comic shows may employ different pragmatic strategies to achieve irony; and (ii) pragmatic aspects such as speech act, pragmatic presupposition and context have a vital role in determining the ironic meaning in British and Iraqi comic shows.

The model adopted in this study is a pragmatic one.

Its main categories are: Grice's cooperative principle and implicature(1975), Yule's inference (2006), Mey's pragmatic presupposition(2001), Searl's speech act theory (1979), and Leech's (1983) maxims of politeness.

The most important conclusions the study reached at are: (i) pragmatic aspects such as speech act, pragmatic presupposition and context have a decisive role in determining the ironic meaning in British and Iraqi comic shows; (ii) irony can be used as a tool of criticism in comic Lots of comic shows have been largely displayed on various TV channels and social media.

The presenters of such shows talk about different issues such as political, social, economic etc.

This study aims at identifying the most common pragmatic strategies used to issue irony in the two comic shows which are Last week tonight and Al-Basheerare chosen.

.

Also, it aims at showing the differences between British and Iraqi comic shows in these aspects.

To test out the validity of these hypothesis, eight comic videos are selected-four from each show.

It is hypothesized that: (i) the presenter of comic shows may employ different pragmatic strategies to achieve irony; and (ii) pragmatic aspects such as speech act, pragmatic presupposition and context have a vital role in determining the ironic meaning in British and Iraqi comic shows.

The model adopted in this study is a pragmatic one.

Its main categories are: Grice's cooperative principle and implicature(1975), Yule's inference (2006), Mey's pragmatic presupposition(2001), Searl's speech act theory (1979), and Leech's (1983) maxims of politeness.

The most important conclusions the study reached at are: (i) pragmatic aspects such as speech act, pragmatic presupposition and context have a decisive role in determining the ironic meaning in British and Iraqi comic shows; (ii) irony can be used as a tool of criticism in comic shows.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Hamdi, Hanna Qaysar& Ali, Abid Hammud. 2018. A pragmatic study of irony in some British and Iraqi TV comic shows. Journal of Language Studies،Vol. 1, no. 4, pp.28-52.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1294028

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Hamdi, Hanna Qaysar& Ali, Abid Hammud. A pragmatic study of irony in some British and Iraqi TV comic shows. Journal of Language Studies Vol. 1, no. 4 (2018), pp.28-52.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1294028

American Medical Association (AMA)

Hamdi, Hanna Qaysar& Ali, Abid Hammud. A pragmatic study of irony in some British and Iraqi TV comic shows. Journal of Language Studies. 2018. Vol. 1, no. 4, pp.28-52.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1294028

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

-

Record ID

BIM-1294028