Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak was declared a pandemic (a global health emergency) following its ravaging spread and increasing death toll that led to the unprecedented multi-sectoral crisis and collateral damage. These, and the non-discovery of reliable therapeutic medicines combined to generate rising fears and tension across the globe. To cope with these realities, discourse participants devised humorous expressions to create laughter, ease tension and melt fears. The paper seeks to examine the contextual usage of such humorous expressions used in Nigeria, particularly in Calabar, that denote the sociolinguistic milieu, and shared knowledge and experience of the interactants. The study adopts Relief and Encryption Theories of Humour because the theories account for the situational appropriateness of the humorous expressions as “coping devices” in coherence with the cognitive, linguistic, situational and social contexts. Data were generated by means of participant observation in on-site and virtual interactions in social media platforms. Findings show that COVID-19 pandemic has exerted irresistible pressure on language resources that stimulated the creation of humorous expressions as coping needs for the consequential circumstance. Specifically, the humorous expressions such as “happy wives”, “sad husbands”, “side chicks are hungry” among others were regularly and contextually deployed for comic reliefs and cognitive recreations to stimulate laughter in crisis. Linguistically, the expressions are devised English structures and other constructs with codemixed elements derived from the registers of several discourse domains that reflect the Nigerian sociolinguistic environment. The constructs are therefore modelled to demystify the pandemic and unify interactants in order to ease tension and cope with the realities of the preventive and survival protocols.
Publisher
Estonian Literary Museum Scholarly Press
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Applied Psychology,Communication,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies
Reference48 articles.
1. Abdulmajeed, R. & Hameed, S. K. (2017). ‘Using a linguistic theory of humour in teaching English grammar’. English Language Teaching 10 (2), pp. 40-47.
2. Akinola, A. J. (2018). ‘Pragmatics of crisis-motivated humour in computer mediated platforms in Nigeria’. Journal of Language and Education 4 (3), pp. 6-17.
3. Ali, A. (2020). ‘COVID-19 as a space of corrosive humour in Nigeria’. Retrieved July 18, 2020 from https://intervention.org.
4. Aremu, M. A. (2013). ‘Nigerianisms in the English language usage by selected Pentecostal preachers in Southwest Nigeria’. Ife Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 1 (2), pp. 82-97.
5. British Broadcasting Corporation (2020). ‘Coronavirus: Why some Nigerians are gloating about Covid-19’. Retrieved July 18, 2020 from www.bbc.com.
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献