Abstract
The article is an opening message from the journal's editors summarizing the key aspects of the issue.
References
Agamben, G. (2011). Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life . Moscow: Europe. (In Russian).
Bakhtin, M. M. (1990). The Work of François Rabelais and the Popular Culture of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Moscow: Fiction Literature. (In Russian).
Bakhtin, M. M. (1994). Issues of Dostoevsky's Work. Moscow. (In Russian).
Bompar, L., Lunardo, R., & Saintives, C. (2018). The effects of humor usage by salespersons: The roles of humor type and business sector. Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing, 33(5), 599–609. doi: 10.1108/JBIM-07-2017-0174
Borden, D. S., & Suggs, L. S. (2019). Strategically Leveraging Humor in Social Marketing Campaigns. Social Marketing Quarterly, 25(3), 193–208. doi: 10.1177/1524500419854068
Freidenberg, O. M. (2006). The Idea of Parody (Outline of a Paper). Veche: Journal of Russian Philosophy and Culture, (17), 230–240. (In Russian).
Gurkaynak, N., Ucel, E. B., & Gunerergin, M. (2011). Is laughter, as the best medicine, the remedy for crisis’ pain? Use of humor in marketing communications. African Journal of Business Management, 5(15), 6240–6246.
Kozintsev, A. G. (2007). Human and laughter. St. Petersburg : Aletheia. (In Russian).
McLuhan, G. M. (2011). Understanding Media. Moscow: Kuchkovo Pole. (In Russian).
Ng, E. (2020). No Grand Pronouncements Here...: Reflections on Cancel Culture and Digital Media Participation. Television & New Media, 21(6), 621–627. doi: 10.1177/1527476420918828
Otto, B. (2008). Fools: Those whom kings listen to. St. Petersburg: ABC-Classics.. (In Russian).
Seibt, K. (2014). How Anarchists and Comedians Brought Icelandic Capital out of Crisis (A. Kneltz, Trans.). Retrieved from RBC Style website: https://style.rbc.ru/impressions/57163cef9a7947413601fe37 (In Russian).
Shklovsky, V. B. (1929). On the Theory of Prose. Moscow: Federation. (In Russian).
Shubinsky, S. N. (1871). Historical Essays and Stories. St. Petersburg: Plotnikov Publishing House. (In Russian).
Troitskiy, S. (2021). Is parody dangerous? The European Journal of Humour Research, 9(2), 92–111. doi: 10.7592/EJHR2021.9.2.517
Troitsky, S. A. (2006). A.I. Vvedensky: The Meaning of an Anecdote Told at a Lecture. In Alexander Ivanovich Vvedensky and his philosophical epoch. Collection of scientific articles (pp. 179–181). St. Petersburg. (In Russian).
Tynyanov, Y. N. (1921). Dostoevsky and Gogol. Petrograd: Opoyaz.
Tynyanov, Y. N. (1977). Dostoevsky and Gogol (To the Theory of Parody). In Y. N. Tynyanov, Poetics. History of Literature. Film (pp. 198–226). Moscow: Nauka. (In Russian).
Wallace, D. F. (1993). E Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction. Review of Contemporary Fiction, 13(2), 151–194.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.