Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
People's beliefs about their ability to be funny, like their creative self-beliefs more generally, are important to understanding their creative goals, actions, and achievements in the domain of humor. Paralleling general creative self-concepts, humor self-concepts consist of humor selfefficacy ("I can" confidence beliefs about one's ability to be funny) and humor identity ("I am" beliefs about the centrality of being funny to one's sense of self). The present research explored how these beliefs relate to Extraversion and Openness to Experience, two major traits in humor research, and to a recent model of Imagination. An online sample of adults (n = 307) completed several measures of the many aspects and facets of these traits (the 40-item Big Five Aspects Scale, the Big Five Inventory-2, and the Dual Facet Imagination Scale) along with the Humor Efficacy and Identity Short Scales. Random forest models were used to disentangle the many correlated aspects and facets and to estimate their unique predictive importance. Humor selfefficacy was primarily marked by being intellectually imaginative and socially outgoing, and secondarily by being energetic, active, and assertive. Humor identity was primarily marked by being sociable and imaginative. These profiles reinforce the social nature of humor as a creative practice and suggest differences in how personality relates to humor beliefs versus humor abilities.
People's beliefs about their ability to be funny, like their creative self-beliefs more generally, are important to understanding their creative goals, actions, and achievements in the domain of humor. Paralleling general creative self-concepts, humor self-concepts consist of humor selfefficacy ("I can" confidence beliefs about one's ability to be funny) and humor identity ("I am" beliefs about the centrality of being funny to one's sense of self). The present research explored how these beliefs relate to Extraversion and Openness to Experience, two major traits in humor research, and to a recent model of Imagination. An online sample of adults (n = 307) completed several measures of the many aspects and facets of these traits (the 40-item Big Five Aspects Scale, the Big Five Inventory-2, and the Dual Facet Imagination Scale) along with the Humor Efficacy and Identity Short Scales. Random forest models were used to disentangle the many correlated aspects and facets and to estimate their unique predictive importance. Humor selfefficacy was primarily marked by being intellectually imaginative and socially outgoing, and secondarily by being energetic, active, and assertive. Humor identity was primarily marked by being sociable and imaginative. These profiles reinforce the social nature of humor as a creative practice and suggest differences in how personality relates to humor beliefs versus humor abilities.
The article presents the results of a socio-philosophical study of the Ukrainian women‘s humor, which has embodied by the jokes of Telegram channels. A review of the theoretical heritage of researchers of women's humor and humor in conditions of war. It‘s substantiated that the study of female humor during the russian full-scale invasion is relevant for Ukraine. In particular, a query in the GPT 4.0 chat has been used to justify the relevance. It‘s also noted that the study of humor during the war goes beyond the analysis of theoretical provisions to the solution of applied problems. The humorous Telegram channels were selected for the research according to a specified number of criteria. For that selection, the ratings of Telegram channels were used, taking into account the number of subscribers and coverage. To relate the channel to the presentation of Ukrainian humor, it had to be Ukrainian-language and had checked for the absence of calque/fakes, which indicated by the Center for Countering Disinformation under the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine. Russian-language humorous Telegram channels were viewed and used for comparison, but their names are not indicated in the present article. An intersectional socio-philosophical analysis was also conducted, suggesting the intersection of the following vectors: gender, national identity, civil position and social status. The scientific investigation confirmed the gendered humorous practices in the four areas previously highlighted by H. Kotthof. At the same time, a number of features of modern Ukrainian female humor are also noted. It has been demonstrated in the present article, that Ukrainian-speaking female humorous channels could be considered as prevention and counteraction to sexism and male domination. It has been also noted that the comic misandry of Ukrainian women cannot be considered as sexism, with the exception of hatred of men from among the Russian invaders. The vast majority of jokes in the female humorous Telegram channels correspond in their characteristics to the signs of feminist humor outlined in T. Hraban's study. There are also a number of jokes based on the traditional paradigm in intergender interaction. It's also has been shown that viewing Ukrainian humorous Telegram channels may improve the adaptation processes and facilitate women's response to a stressful situation. It is noted that humorous channels, returning women to peaceful topics, create an environment of peace and overcoming anxiety and can become a platform for fraudsters, information warfare and psychological operations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.