15th METU International ELT Convention, Ankara, Türkiye, 10 - 11 Mayıs 2024, ss.36
L2 learners are not just L2 learners; countless other relevant social categorisation might be rightly
applied to them, and any of these might come to bear on their interactional conduct when learning, or
using, an L2 (Firth and Wagner, 1997). The relationship between humour and identity construction
has been widely investigated in the earlier literature (e.g., Schnurr, 2009; Waring, 2013); however,
only a handful of studies (Bonacina-Pugh, 2013; Moutinho, 2019; Nao, 2015) have examined
membership categories (‘teacher’ and ‘student’) in the classrooms. This study presents the first
examination of participants’ categorial orientations in talk-in-interaction that is produced and/or
treated as humorous in the second language (L2) classrooms. More specifically, drawing on
Membership Categorisation Analysis (MCA) and sequential analysis, this study explores how
participants invoke, negotiate, and deal with category-activity puzzles, - the unexpected combinations
of certain membership categories (Silverman, 2001) and category-bound activities-, as resources for
producing and/or treating utterances as humorous in L2 classrooms. The analysis demonstrates that
participants display complex and creative use of L2 to create incongruities for humorous effect in
producing category-activity puzzles. It is also observed that participants use their understandings of
common-sense knowledge and category memberships as a resource in managing and negotiating
incongruities created through category-puzzles during classroom tasks. As such, this study advances
our understanding with regards to the categorial orientations in humour practices in L2 classrooms
and contributes to the growing body of MCA studies in classrooms.
Keywords: Category-activity puzzles, MCA, humour, L2 classroom interaction