Parody science explained
Parody science, sometimes called spoof science, is the act of mocking science in a satirical way. Science can be parodied for a purpose, ranging from social commentary and making political points, to humor for its own sake.
Parody science is different from science humor or from real science that happens to be humorous, in that parody science has little or no basis in real science.
One of the forms of parody science are spoof scientific articles. Some can be seen as a subgenre of science fiction.
List of parody science resources
- Annals of Improbable Research – Science humor journal that awards the Ig Nobel Prizes.
- Journal of Irreproducible Results – Parody science journal since 1955.
- Science Made Stupid – 1985 parody science book by Tom Weller.
- Speculative Grammarian – "the premier scholarly journal featuring research in the neglected field of satirical linguistics".
- Dihydrogen monoxide parody, which exploits common fears about science to make people think that water is dangerous.
- Look Around You, a BBC scientific satire based on school science programmes from the '70s and '80s.
- Ask Dr. Science, a humorous radio and television program.
- Worm Runner's Digest. The satirical flip-side of the Journal of Biological Psychology, known for such articles as "A Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown."
- Sokal affair, physicist Alan Sokal's hoax paper entitled, "Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity" was published in the journal Social Text.
- Experimental demonstration of the tomatotopic organization in the Soprano (Cantatrix sopranica L.), a fake research paper by the writer Georges Perec.[1]
- Isaac Asimov wrote several spoof scientific papers about the fictitious chemical compound Thiotimoline.
- Proceedings of the Natural Institute of Science – Online-only journal that publishes both satirical and real articles in a scientific journal format.
- Body Ritual Among the Nacirema, a satire of social anthropology research by Horace Miner.
- The unsuccessful self-treatment of a case of "writer's block", an article with no content, but cited over 70 times
See also
External links
Notes and References
- http://pauillac.inria.fr/~xleroy/stuff/tomato/tomato.html Experimental demonstration of the tomatotopic organization in the Soprano (Cantatrix sopranica L.