In this article, we aim to consider latifas, anecdotes and chiste genres as xenomorphic genres, relying on the analytical hypotheses of various scientists. In the course of our research, we performed tasks such as identifying the cultural contexts of anecdotes, analyzing the structure of anecdotes, studying their linguistic features, taking them into comparative analysis, and sharing our personal experience.
The methodology for studying anecdotes as a xenomorphic genre has included different strategies for understanding, analyzing, and appreciating anecdotes in different cultural contexts. It is known that the emotions of the human mind to laugh and rejoice have been formed since the time when man appeared. Ancient people communicated or exchanged information with each other through extralinguistic means, when the mechanism of language communication was not yet formed in the primitive community system. These include pictures drawn on rocks, various flute-shaped resources used to determine hunting strategies, and gestures expressing different meanings.
In this regard, some scientists have conducted scientific research in various genres such as anecdotes, anecdotes, chiste xenomorph. In our opinion, these genres are related to the ways of forming human mental imagination and the methods of their observation. For example, Freud considered humor to be a mental activity that works at the verbal level. The author studies the preverbal aspects of mother-child interaction.
There is extensive discussion and scientific research on the psychoanalytic treatment of children with Asperger's syndrome to demonstrate the activity of working with humor as a means of illustrating these thoughts and creating mental images. To conclude, xenomorphic genres such as anecdotal anecdote and chiste have a negative or positive effect on human mental activity in the process of communication.
Philology Matters
·
Volume 53, Issue 2
· 2025
Latifa, Anecdote, and Chiste as Xenomorphic Genres
DOI: 10.36078/987655525
Litsenziya
Creative Commons License
Copyright © 2026 by the author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
Abstract
Keywords:
latifa
anecdote
chiste xenomorph
brainstorming
human mind
genre
analysis
socio-cultural
comic
pun
chiste argo
culture
language
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