Department of Social and Clinical Psychology, Hijiyama University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Graduate School of Teacher Education, Saga University, Saga, Japan.
Sci Rep. 2022 Jun 11;12(1):9704. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-13755-4.
Previous research on individual social class (SC) and humor has found support for the hypothesis that those with higher SC will engage in more dominant humor (aggressive humor) that derogates or degrades others. One rationale for introducing this hypothesis is the well-known theory that people with higher SC are more self-oriented; however, it has recently been shown that there may be cultural differences in this theory. In this study, using a Japanese sample objective measures (income and educational attainment) and subjective measures (perceived social status) and examined in relation to humor. Four types of humor assessed by the Humor Styles Questionnaire and two types of humor measured by the Dual Self-Directed Humor Scale were considered to investigate the relationship between SC and humor. Unlike prior findings obtained in Western countries, Study 1 (N = 344) and Study 2 (N = 604) consistently showed that SC and aggressive humor were unrelated. Rather, SC was shown to be positively associated with other-oriented humor in Japan, a country belonging to the Confucian cultural sphere of East Asia. The differences in results from these previous studies were discussed from a cultural contextual perspective.
先前关于个体社会阶层(SC)和幽默的研究支持了这样一种假设,即那些社会阶层较高的人会更多地使用具有支配性的幽默(攻击性幽默),从而贬低或侮辱他人。提出这一假设的一个理论依据是众所周知的理论,即社会阶层较高的人更加以自我为中心;然而,最近的研究表明,这一理论可能存在文化差异。在这项研究中,我们使用了日本样本的客观衡量指标(收入和教育程度)和主观衡量指标(感知社会地位),并考察了它们与幽默之间的关系。通过使用幽默风格问卷评估了四种类型的幽默,使用双重自我导向幽默量表测量了两种类型的幽默,以研究 SC 和幽默之间的关系。与在西方国家获得的先前发现不同,研究 1(N=344)和研究 2(N=604)一致表明,SC 与攻击性幽默无关。相反,在属于东亚儒家文化圈的日本,SC 与他人导向的幽默呈正相关。从文化背景的角度讨论了这些先前研究结果之间的差异。