Épisodes

  • Episode 12: Professor Ron Stewart/The one about Cartoonists
    Aug 3 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Jessica Milner Davis

    About our guest on this episode:

    Ronald, an Australian, is a professor in the Sociology Department of Daito Bunka University. He has lived and worked in Japan since 1998, earning his MA and PhD at Nagoya University on a Japanese government scholarship. Ronald is currently researching the work of Japan’s first professional cartoonist Kitazawa Rakuten (1876 – 1955) as part of a longer-term history of Japanese political cartooning project. His recent publications include: “Can Australian Cartoonists Monster the Gods of Asian Politics?” coauthored with Robert Phiddian in Moral Dimensions of Humour (2024); "Unlocking Verbal-Visual Puns in Late-Nineteenth-Century Japanese Cartoons” in The Palgrave Handbook of Humour, History, and Methodology (2021); and "Ito Hirobumi's Nose: Syphilis in Early 20th Century Japanese Cartoons," International Journal of Comic Art (2019). He also coauthored with CJ Suzuki the book Manga: A Critical Guide (2023). Ronald has been a member of the Japan Society for Studies in Cartoons and Comics since 2003.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’s Department of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book is called Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Jessica is an Honorary Associate in the School of Art, Communication and English, University of Sydney, and coordinates the AHSN. She is a member of Clare Hall, Cambridge and Research Affiliate with Brunel University London’s Centre for Comedy Studies Research. She has been Visiting Scholar at many universities in Europe and the USA, Visiting Fellow at Cambridge University (2012) and Senior Visiting Fellow at Bologna University (2013). Her interdisciplinary work on humour was recognised with Fellowship of the Royal Society of NSW in 2017 and the 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award from the ISHS. An editorial board member for leading humour research journals and book series, her latest book is “Humour in Asian Cultures: Tradition and Context” (Routledge, 2022).

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch about something else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au(AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/,YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconferenceor Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

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    16 min
  • Episode 11: Dr Will Noonan/The one about Translation
    Jul 27 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Rodney Taveira

    About our guest on this episode:

    Will is a lecturer in English studies and translation at the University of Burgundy, where he is assigned to the Interlanguage Centre - Text, Image, Language (UR 4812) laboratory. Originally from Australia, he began his research career by studying the relationship between Francophone and Anglophone humour before gradually turning to issues related to the translation, adaptation and accessibility of audiovisual and digital products.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’sDepartment of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book iscalled Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Rodney is the AcademicDirector, Undergraduate Coordinator, and a Senior Lecturer in American Studies at the United States Studies Centre. At The University of Sydney, he teaches across the American Studies program and his research areas include contemporary American fiction, film and television, the interrelation of literature and visual culture, humour, and post-World War II American cultural politics.

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch aboutsomething else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au(AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

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    17 min
  • Episode 10: Professor Tony Moore/The one about Comedy History
    Jul 20 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Matilda Knowles

    About our guest on this episode:

    Tony is the Lead Chief Investigator for the ARC Linkage Grant ‘Comedy Country’. Based at Monash University’s School of Media, Film and Journalism, he has a background in leading large-scale projects and is an experienced cultural and media historian focusing on the intersection of countercultures, popular culture and politics and the translation of research into digital media outputs. Tony’s books include Fringe to Famous – Australian Cultural Production After theCreative Industries (Bloomsbury, 2024), Dancing with Empty Pockets: Australia’s Bohemians Since 1860 (2012 Allen & Unwin), Death or Liberty: Rebels and Radicals Transported toAustralia 1788-1868 (adapted as major ABC screendocumentary), and The Barry McKenzie Movies (Currency Press 2005). Tony has enjoyed previous careers in media and book publishing as a documentary maker and current affairs producer at ABC TV, and commissioning editor of Pluto Press and Cambridge University Press.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’sDepartment of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book iscalled Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Til is a PhD candidate at Monash University inMelbourne, Australia. Her PhD research focuses on the influence of suicide jokes told by stand-up comedians in post-2000s Australia. She’s interested in the role of authenticity, community, mediation and confession in contemporary performance comedy. Til’s Master's research, “Larrikins, listeners and Lifeline: inside Australian comedy chatcast The Little Dum Dum Club”, examined the performance of cultural conventions and community in comedy podcasts. Til is also a pop culture writer, speculative fiction nerd, and host of the ‘Serrated Edge’ AHSN ECR podcast.

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch aboutsomething else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au(AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

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    16 min
  • Episode 9: Dr John Cook/The one about Games
    Jul 13 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Geoffrey Lee

    About our guest on this episode:

    John is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, researching climate misinformation. He wrote and drew the cartoons in the book Cranky Uncle vs. Climate Change, and developed the Cranky Uncle smartphone game, which combines cartoons and gamification to build resilience against misinformation.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’s Department of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book is called Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Geoffrey Lee is a second-year PhD student at the University of Sydney. His thesis will explore how humour is transferred from the livestreaming platform Twitch onto other connected social media platforms. You can find him on @geoffreylee.bsky.social‬ and check out his blog here: https://geofflearnstobefunny.wordpress.com/

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch aboutsomething else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au(AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

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    15 min
  • Episode 8: Associate Professor Ian Maxwell/The one about Theatre
    Jul 6 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Rodney Taveira

    About our guest on this episode:

    Ian’s research seeks to understand both how people use creative practices to make sense of their lives and experiences, particularly in the context of extreme circumstances, and how we might use the idea of performance, more generally, as a way of thinking about being human. His current projects are, first, a performance-led exploration of performance work made by German/Austrian refugees in Australia during the Second World War, and, second, a book about avant-garde performance in Australia from the 1960s.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’s Department of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book is called Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Rodney is the Academic Director, Undergraduate Coordinator, and a Senior Lecturer in American Studies at the United States Studies Centre. At The University of Sydney, he teaches across the American Studies program, and his research areas include contemporary American fiction, film and television, the interrelation of literature and visual culture, humour, and post-World War II American cultural politics.

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch aboutsomething else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au(AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

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    17 min
  • Episode 7: Dr Tatiana Bur/The one about Classicists
    Feb 9 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Anna-Sophie Jürgens

    About our guest on this episode:

    Tatiana is a Lecturer at ANU in Canberra and joined the university’s Centre for Classical Studies in 2023. Prior to this, she was the Moses and Mary Finley Research Fellow at Darwin College, University of Cambridge. Tatiana is a graduate of the University of Sydney where she completed her undergraduate studies and MPhil. Tatiana is French-Australian and has lived in France, Australia, Spain, England and Portugal. She is passionate not just about ancient Greece and Rome, but about languages and cultures (ancient and modern) more broadly, talking to us about how the academic studies of humour, technology, and Classics go together like you wouldn’t believe!

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’s Department of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book is called Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Anna-Sophie is a Senior Lecturer in Science Communication at the Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science of the Australian National University, and the founder and head of the ‘Popsicule – ANU’s Science in Popular Culture and Entertainment Hub’. Her research explores the cultural meanings of science, the history of (violent) clowns and mad scientists, science and humour, and the interface between science and (public) art.

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch about something else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au (AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    16 min
  • Episode 6: Dr João Paulo Capelotti /The one about the Law
    Feb 2 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Alberto Godioli

    About our guest on this episode:

    João Paulo Capelotti is a Brazilian legal scholar and humour studies researcher with a PhD and Master of Laws from the Federal University of Paraná (UFPR). João is a member of the International Society for Humor Studies (ISHS) and the International Society for Luso-Hispanic Humor Studies. His work explores humour and the law, focusing on Brazilian court cases and their treatment of humour. His recent publications include chapters in Judges, Judging and Humour (SpringerLink) and the DeGruyter Handbook of Humor Studies. João’s work bridges legal theory, humour, and conflict, highlighting the intersection of laughter and jurisprudence in the Global South.

    Alberto Godioli is Associate Professor in European Culture and Literature at the University of Groningen and founder of the Forum for Humor and the Law (www.forhum.org). His research focuses on humor and free speech jurisprudence, and he is leading a five-year project on this topic (Humor in Court, NWO Vidi grant, 2022-2027). In 2023 he co-authored the report Humor and Free Speech: A Comparative Analysis of Global Case Law (Columbia Global Freedom of Expression). In dialogue with experts from UNESCO and the African and European Human Rights Courts among others, Alberto is currently finalizing the toolkit What’s in a Joke? Assessing Humor in Free Speech Jurisprudence (Spring 2025).

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch about something else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au (AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    18 min
  • Episode 5: Associate Professor Kerry Mullan/The one about The Network
    Jan 27 2025

    Episode hosts: Ben Nickl and Suchi Chowdhury

    About our guest on this episode:

    Kerry is an Associate Professor at RMIT in Melbourne and teaches French language and culture at all proficiency levels, and sociolinguistics. Her main research interests are cross-cultural communication and differing interactional styles – particularly those of French and Australian English speakers. She also researches in the areas of intercultural pragmatics, discourse analysis, language teaching and conversational humour. Kerry also heads the board of the global Australasian Humour Studies Network and talks to us about the research that its members do, how one can join, and what to expect from the annual network conference.

    About the episode hosts:

    Ben is a Senior Lecturer in The University of Sydney’s Department of Comparative Literature and Translation Studies. He works on popular technologies of mediation like humour and laughter and is the research coordinator for the Australasian Humour Studies Network. His latest book is called Moral Dimensions of Humour (Tampere University Press, open access, 2024).

    Suchi is a PhD student at RMIT University, Melbourne, researching stand-up comedy in India and its engagement with the political. She is creating her data through interviews with comedians, the ethnographic study of live comedy shows, and textual analysis of comedic material. Born and raised in India, Suchi moved to Melbourne 18 years ago and has worked in professional roles in TAFE and tertiary education. In her other life in India, she worked in advertising, journalism, and public relations.

    Acknowledgement of Country:

    We would like to acknowledge and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional owners and custodians of the lands on which the University of Sydney has been built, and which were taken from them without their consent, treaty or compensation. Most episodes of this podcast were recorded on this land.
    This land has always been a learning space for many Aboriginal nations, and as teachers and students, and people of all kinds of origins, we can draw strength and guidance from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge, one of the oldest knowledge systems in the world.

    Want to come on as a guest or co-host, or get in touch about something else? Simply email benjamin.nickl@sydney.edu.au (AHSN research coordinator and ‘Cutting Edge’ host), visit the AHSN website https://ahsnhumourstudies.org/ and follow/subscribe to us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AHSNHumour/, YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@ahsnconference or Twitter/X @AHSN_Humour.

    Special thanks and all credit for editing and sound engineering goes to Jacob Craig/USYD FASS media room studios.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    15 min