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“Can I Get in on the Joke, Too?”: Analysing Racial Humor within the Public/Private Realm of the Internet

“Can I Get in on the Joke, Too?”: Analysing Racial Humor within the Public/Private Realm of the Internet
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Author(s): Frederick W. Gooding Jr. (Northern Arizona University, USA)
Copyright: 2016
Pages: 13
Source title: Analyzing Language and Humor in Online Communication
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Rotimi Taiwo (Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria), Akinola Odebunmi (University of Ibadan, Nigeria)and Akin Adetunji (Emmanuel Alayande College of Education, Nigeria)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-0338-5.ch009

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Abstract

This chapter explores the ramifications of having race-based “dirty laundry” aired through humor, without necessarily being dirty jokes. Not only is the United States of America reputed to be a “free country,” but also there are few restrictions on Internet participation outside of obvious legal infractions. Thus, while repulsive in their worst form or in poor taste in their naive form, racist jokes are not regulated on the Internet. Nor is expressing or espousing racism online in and of itself illegal. Currently our legal system is designed to respond or react to manifestations of racist thought when acted out against another in the physical realm (e.g., denying another a job based upon their race or inflicting bodily harm when motivated by racial animus). While we presume that most would not want to entertain destructive thoughts, people are free to hold, share and emote racist ideas in cyberspace. Thus, with the ever-expanding role of the Internet in many of our lives, it is important to interrogate whether such publicly broadcast in-group humor will desensitize other members of other races outside of the joke. This chapter will tease out the implications of the continued sharing online of racial humor, with those both in and outside of the original joke.

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