Publication | Closed Access
Adding Nuance to the Study of Political Humor Effects: Experimental Research on Juvenalian Satire Versus Horatian Satire
153
Citations
34
References
2011
Year
Social CriticismElaboration Likelihood ModelPublic OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorRhetoricCommunicationMedia StudiesComparative LiteraturePolitical SatireMedia EffectsRecipient AbilityPolitical CommunicationLanguage StudiesPolitical Humor EffectsCommunication EffectsExperimental ResearchCommunication StudyPersuasionHumor StudiesCommunication ResearchSatireDistinct TypesPolitical AttitudesRhetorical TheoryMass CommunicationArtsHumor DetectionAudience ReceptionPolitical SciencePublic Debate
This study extends political humor effects research by focusing on two distinct types of satire, juvenalian and horatian. Theoretical arguments grounded in the elaboration likelihood model culminated in the positing of a series of interactions between message (juvenalian, horatian, traditional opinion-editorial) and recipient ability (high, low) relative to three outcome variables: perceived humor, counterarguing, and attitudes concerning Hillary Clinton’s universal health care plan. An experiment was conducted during the 2008 Democratic primary election. The Message × Ability interactions revealed a need to step beyond the study of satire as monolithic; different types of satire produce divergent effects depending on the ability of the audience member. Future lines of research and the need for additional theory building are discussed.
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