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Should satire make us laugh? Is satire always funny? Why do we laugh at things anyway? Adam and Jo are joined by Dr Kate Davison (University of Sheffield) to talk about the social history of laughter, and the various satires of the eighteenth-century tavern keeper Ned Ward.

In this episode Jo and Adam and Kate talk about: 

The Index of Laughter used in ‘Adam’s Funny Game’:

  1. No reaction
  2. Sympathetic smile
  3. Polite titter
  4. Genuine titter
  5. Gaffuw
  6. Sustained laughing out loud
  7. Roll on the floor laughing
  8. Laughing in your mind but no physical laughter
  9. Your smiling for no reason because you’re working hard to suppress a laugh
  10. Uncontrollable and inappropriate laughter you are unable to sustain

Join Adam and Jo again for their big finale: 

Has satire ever really been a “man’s game”? Does satire work differently when written by women? Or when women are the targets? How is sexuality treated by satire? Adam and Jo are joined by Professor Karen Harvey (University of Birmingham) to talk about satire, sex and gender.