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<title>SOCIO-PRAGMATIC ANALYSIS OF SELECTED IVORIAN STAND-UP COMEDY</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1934</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-13T10:38:31Z</dc:date>
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<title>SOCIO-PRAGMATIC ANALYSIS OF SELECTED IVORIAN STAND-UP COMEDY</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1935</link>
<description>SOCIO-PRAGMATIC ANALYSIS OF SELECTED IVORIAN STAND-UP COMEDY
AKINADE, Esther Oluwaseun
Stand-up Comedy (SUC), a form of entertainment involving humour, is commonly&#13;
deployed for social re-engineering among Africans, including Ivorians. Extant linguistic&#13;
studies on humour in Côte d’Ivoire concentrated mainly on the semiotic analysis of&#13;
satirical cartoons and mechanisms of humour observed in humorous press (Gbich) in Cote&#13;
d’Ivoire. However, little attention was paid to the socio-pragmatic dynamics of SUC. This&#13;
study was, therefore, designed to examine socio-pragmatic dynamics of humour in&#13;
routines of selected Ivorian Stand-up Comedians (ISUCNs), with a view to determining&#13;
the discourse issues, linguistic resources and humour strategies in the routines.&#13;
Dell Hymes’ Ethnography of Communication, complemented by Dan Sperber and Deirdre&#13;
Wilson’s Relevance Theory, was adopted as the framework. The descriptive design was&#13;
used. Purposive sampling was deployed for the selection of seven ISUCNs because they&#13;
featured regularly in ‘Bonjour’ nights (Ivorian annual comic programme ushering every&#13;
New Year) organised by Radio-Télévision Ivoirienne. They were Agalawal, Papitou, La&#13;
Flamme de l’Estanguer (FE), Mala Adamo, Les Zinzins de l’Art (ZA), Joel and EnK2K.&#13;
Seven routines (one for each) were purposively selected from the 2018 edition of Bonjour&#13;
recorded on DVD based on their preponderant engagement of socio-political issues. The&#13;
data were subjected to socio-pragmatic analysis.&#13;
Four discourse issues were identified: economic hardship (Agalawal, Papitou, FE and&#13;
ZA), bad governance (Agalawal, Mala Adamo, FE and ZA), unemployment (Agalawal,&#13;
FE, ZA and Joel) and marital unfaithfulness (Papitou and EnK2K). These discourse issues&#13;
were to mirror the key socio-political problems in Côte d’Ivoire. Four linguistic resources&#13;
were deployed: wordplay, repetition, formulaic expressions and code switching. Wordplay&#13;
(all comedians) was deployed to display creative playful manipulation of words.&#13;
Repetition (Joel, Agalawal, FE and ZA) was utilised to determine the rhythmic flow of the&#13;
jokes and to make many ideas clearer and memorable. Formulaic expressions (all&#13;
comedians) were used to plan time and to make the pauses shorter or less frequent. Code&#13;
switching (Joel, FE, Agalawal, EnK2K and Mala Adamo), which involves Standard&#13;
French, Popular African French (Nouchi), English, Arabic and native languages (Baoulé&#13;
and Malinké), was deployed to display linguistic competence of the comedians in catering&#13;
for the linguistic diversities of Ivorians. Six humour strategies were employed: ridicule,&#13;
allusion, irreverent behaviour, absurdity, imitation and irony. Ridicule (all comedians) was&#13;
employed to deride socio-political problems verbally and nonverbally. Allusion&#13;
(Agalawal) was used to make indirect reference to incumbent Ivorian president. Irreverent&#13;
behaviour (Agalawal, Papitou and Mala Adamo) was employed to show the lack of proper&#13;
respect for authority. Absurdity (Mala Adamo) was deployed to present situations that go&#13;
against all logical rules. Imitation (Papitou and FE) was employed to mimic little children&#13;
and religious leaders while presenting socio-political problems. Irony (ZA and Mala&#13;
Adamo) was used to satirise the socio-political problems in Côte d’Ivoire.&#13;
Ivorian Stand-up Comedians engage socio-political issues through the deployment of&#13;
humour and linguistic choices in their routines.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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