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Publication Date:
May 2007
ISSN:
1613-3722
DOI:
10.1515/HUMOR.2007.007

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HUMOR

International Journal of Humor Research

Editor-in-Chief: Kuipers, Giselinde

4 Issues per year

Increased IMPACT FACTOR 2011: 0.857
5-year IMPACT FACTOR: 1.033
ERIH category INT2

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Lawyers' use of humor as persuasion

Citation Information: Humor – International Journal of Humor Research. Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 123–156, ISSN (Online) 1613-3722, ISSN (Print) 0933-1719, DOI: 10.1515/HUMOR.2007.007, May 2007

Publication History:
Published Online:
2007-05-21

Abstract

Legal humor is a topic of perennial appeal, and has long been a prolific source of books, articles, and scholarly commentaries which are avidly consumed by popular and professional audiences alike. However, although a number of scholars have analyzed the use of humor in judicial opinions, there is no comparable body of scholarly examinations of lawyers' use of humor in their role as legal advocates. This omission is significant, because in the American legal system, humor and wordplay serve as highly-valued evidence of forensic skill which is deemed appropriate for display both within and outside of the courtroom. Accordingly, this paper attempts to fill the gap in the existing literature by examining attorneys' use of humor as persuasive advocacy in two widely divergent settings, informal court-mandated mediation and oral argument before the United States Supreme Court. In these data, the attorneys use humor aggressively to ridicule the plaintiffs' claims, depicting them as laughable and unworthy of serious consideration, while placing themselves at the center of a comic performance which allows them to display their linguistic skills. These data thus demonstrate that humor can be a potent weapon in an attorney's arsenal.

Keywords: Humor; legal discourse; persuasion

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