On the social meaning of verbal irony

A case study of Kurt Tucholsky's "Ratschläge für einen schlechten Redner"

Verfasst von

Carlotta Quensel, Sandra Richter, Judith Tonhauser

Abstract

Whoever speaks or writes ironically expresses the contrary of what is said, rhetoric would have it. Approaches to verbal irony have been further differentiated in literary, linguistic, and psycholinguistic studies, but there is no consensus on what verbal irony is. We discuss how irony can be detected from the social constellations of its use. After reviewing the complementary foci of literary, linguistic, and psycholinguistic approaches to verbal irony and its social meaning, we analyze select instances of verbal irony in Kurt Tucholsky's Ratschläge für einen schlechten Redner ('Advice for a bad speaker'). We find that literary and linguistic approaches are fruitfully combined in analyzing verbal irony in the Ratschläge, suggesting that research on verbal irony and its social meaning benefits from a cross-disciplinary perspective that builds on the notion of common ground.

Details

Externe Organisation(en)
Universität Stuttgart
Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach (DLA)
Typ
Artikel
Journal
PhiN (Philologie im Netz)
Band
94
Seiten
29-51
ISSN
1433-7177
Publikationsdatum
2022
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
Elektronische Version(en)
https://web.fu-berlin.de/phin/phin94/p94t3.pdf (Zugang: Offen )
PDF
PDF

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