1st Edition

Humor and Masculinity in U.S. Fiction Intersections, Performances, and Functions

By Joseph L. Coulombe Copyright 2025
172 Pages
by Routledge

172 Pages
by Routledge

172 Pages
by Routledge

Humor and Masculinity in U.S. Fiction offers a pragmatic and theoretically informed model for analyzing how humor and gender intersect in key U.S. texts, bringing much-needed attention to the complex ways that humor can support and/or subvert reductive masculine codes and behaviors. Its argument builds upon three major humor theories – the incongruity theory, superiority theory, and relief... Read more

Introduction – Humor and Masculinity in U.S. Fiction: Critical Intersections, Methodologies, and Goals

 

Chapter 1 –  When Humor Bombs: Masculinity in Crisis in Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court

 

Chapter 2 – Weaponized Humor and Homosocial Bonding in Owen Wister’s The Virginian

 

Chapter 3 – Performing Humor in Dorothy Parker’s Fiction: Female Masculinity and Reader Engagement

 

Chapter 4 – Humor, Gender, and Community in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God

 

Chapter 5 Subversive Humor in an Absurdly Gendered World: Joseph Heller’s Search for Meaning in Catch-22

 

Chapter 6 – “Anything for a Laugh”: Transgressive Humor and Liberated Masculinity in Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint

 

Chapter 7 – The Efficacy of Humor in Sherman Alexie’s Flight: Violence, Vulnerability, and the Post-9/11 World

 

Works Cited

Index

Biography

Joseph L. Coulombe is a professor of American literature in the Department of English, Rowan University, New Jersey, United States. He is the author of two additional books, Reading Native American Literature (Routledge, 2011) and Mark Twain and the American West (U of Missouri Press, 2003), and multiple articles on various American writers, texts, and genres. His scholarship explores how literary narratives position readers in relation to shifting ideologies of gender, region, and race. Professor Coulombe earned his Ph.D. from the University of Delaware in 1998 and his B.A. from the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1989. He originally hails from La Crosse, Wisconsin, a Mississippi River town.