Abstract
Abstract
Children’s ability to understand irony is believed to be
acquired late compared to other pragmatic skills. To explore this assertion,
this article presents a review of four decades of research, to determine the age
at which children actually do become capable of understanding ironic utterances,
and what the crucial influencing factors are. As this systematic examination of
the state of research shows, children do indeed seem to gain an understanding of
irony later than other forms of non-literal language. In seeking an explanation
for this finding, this article discusses the methodological orientation of
previous research. It might be that the predominant use of offline methods,
especially metalinguistic judgment tasks, paints a somewhat distorted picture of
children’s irony comprehension. The article therefore argues for the use of
eye-tracking, and a re-examination of the thesis of late acquisition of irony
comprehension in children in the near future.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Behavioral Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,General Computer Science