06. Humour

Angelone, D.J., Richard Hirschman, Sarah Suniga, Michael Armey, and Aaron Armelie. (2005). The Influence of Peer Interactions on Sexually Oriented Joke Telling. Sex Roles, Feb., Vol. 52, Iss. 3-4.

Ford, T. E. (2000). Effects of Sexist Humor on Tolerance of Sexist Events. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 26(9), 1094-1107.

Ford, T., Woodzicka, J. A., Triplett, S. R., & Kochersberger, A. O. (2013). Sexist humor and beliefs that justify societal sexism. Current Research Social Psychology, 64-81.

O’Connor, E. C., Ford, T. E., & Banos, N. C. (2017). Restoring Threatened Masculinity: The Appeal of Sexist and Anti-Gay Humor. Sex Roles, 77(9-10), 567-580.

Pérez, R., & Greene, V. S. (2016). Debating Rape Jokes Vs. Rape Culture: Framing and Counter-Framing Misogynistic Comedy. Social Semiotics, 26(3), 265-282.

Romero-Sánchez, M., Carretero-Dios, H., Megías, J. L., Moya, M., & Ford, T. E. (2017). Sexist Humor and Rape Proclivity: The Moderating Role of Joke Teller Gender and Severity of Sexual Assault. Violence against women, 23(8), 951-972.

Romero-Sánchez, M., Durán, M., Carretero-Dios, H., Megías, J. L., & Moya, M. (2010). Exposure to sexist humor and rape proclivity: The moderator effect of aversiveness ratings. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 25(12), 2339–50.

Ryan, Kathryn M., and Jeanne Kanjorski. (1998). The enjoyment of sexist humor, rape attitudes, and relationship aggression in college students. Sex Roles, May, Vol. 38, Iss. 9/10.

Strain, M. L., Martens, A. L., & Saucier, D. A. (2016). “Rape Is the New Black”: Humor’s Potential for Reinforcing and Subverting Rape Culture. Translational Issues in Psychological Science, 2(1), 86.

Thomae, M., & Pina, A. (2015). Sexist humor and social identity: the role of sexist humor in men’s in-group cohesion, sexual harassment, rape proclivity, and victim blame. HUMOR, 28(2), 187-204.

Thomae, M., & Viki, G. T. (2013). Why Did the Woman Cross the Road? The Effect of Sexist Humor on Men's Rape Proclivity. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology, 7(3), 250.

Viki, G. T., Thomae, M., Cullen, A., & Fernandez, H. (2007). The Effect of Sexist Humor and Type of Rape on Men’s Self-Reported Rape Proclivity and Victim Blame. Current research in social psychology, 13(10), 122-132.

Viki, G., Thomae, M., Cullen, A., & Fernandez, H. (2007). The effect of sexist humor and type of rape on men’s self-reported rape proclivity and victim blame. Current Research in Social Psychology, 13(10), 122–132. http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.409.9193&rep=rep1&type=pdf