Irony: Pragmatic, Social and Legal Consequences
By (Author) Professor Paul Simpson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
8th February 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Communication studies
Humour
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Underpinning many common types of discourse, such as humour, sarcasm, politeness and satire, irony forms a crucial part of our everyday social interactions. But how well do we really understand its use, effects and consequences In this book, Paul Simpson develops a comprehensive stylistic-pragmatic framework for understanding the concept of irony and the way it functions in written and spoken language, across different social and cultural contexts. From the Guardians victory for irony against Elton John to the tweet that sparked the Twitter Joke Trial, he showcases examples from the real world of language and communication to build an accessible model of irony, grounded in actual discursive events and their social and legal material outcomes. While we often consider irony to simply mean the opposite of what was said, Simpson reveals the full range of its theoretical complexities and nuances, shedding light on conferred irony, ironic belief and situational irony to uncover the true pragmatic meaning of everyday ironic utterances.
Paul Simpson is Baines Professor of English Language at the University of Liverpool, UK.